Queensland …

Progress southwards has been slow over the last week or so. The reason is simple Queensland has the highest rate of intra-Australian immigration of all the Australian states. This is where some of our friends have resettled and we even have a few that were born here. We have been looked after royally by them. My last full day in the state this trip was spent minding the dog while Gayle visited a friend that she made on her first day at kinder.

Queensland is the second largest state and the third most populous. Surface area 1,723,030 square kilometres (665,270 sq mi), population 5.5 million which is roughly 3 people per square kilometre – if you spread them out evenly you’d have trouble finding them. But they are not spread out evenly. Three quarters live in the southeast mainly Brisbane, most of the rest live up the coast in the narrow strip east of the Great Dividing Range. The only town of more than 20,000 in the vast plains west of the Divide is Mount Isa.

Brisbane is the State Capital, it’s tucked away in the bottom right hand corner. The tropic of Capricorn crosses the state about 370 km further north. We entered the State in the far north west via Hell’s Gate which is 2,259km by road by the direct route, not the way we did it. We will leave via Tweed Heads. Just 103km south of Brisbane and we’re in New South Wales. Queensland is very asymmetric!

It also has a great diversity of flora and fauna and a great range of habitats. The wet tropics are very wet, the far west is usually very dry and the Gulf of Carpentaria is both alternately. The State bird list (according to eBird) stands at 667 species. Bear in mind some of those are accidentals not residents or regular visitors. I’ve seen 249 of the usual suspects this year. The closure of Mount Lewis put a dent in my expectations and if you really want to clean up you must spend time up at the tip and in Iron Range, Cape York.

We left the wet tropics a fortnight ago and since then have racked up 145 species. The map shows where the binoculars got a work out.

I’m putting the final touches to this post in Port Macquarrie, NSW. Gayle has family here. I drove through pouring rain. It was just 15°C on arrival. That was in daytime, I can’t remember an overnight low as cold as that in Broom’s winter. But there’s no such thing as bad weather it’s just bad clothing. Shame that’s all I’ve got. I may lose a finger or two. Even the birds are laughing at me.

A Little Geography …

Our Google globe has been placed north up with Australia at the bottom, Japan at the top.

Globe 1

Japan is part of a great archipelago that hangs off the Kamchatka peninsula and curves away to the east of the main landmass of Asia, swings away around the north of Australia and then down to New Zealand.

If we superimpose the relevant part of the Great Ring of Fire on the map we can then deduce a great deal about the underlying geology.

Ring of Fire

The Japanese part of that great archilelago consists of almost 8,000 islands between latitudes 24°N and 46°N, and longitudes 122°E and 146°E. That’s 2600 km from Okinawa to the tip of Hokkaido. The four largest islands are Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu and Shikoku and together they make up about 97% of the land area.

Japan is mountainous, only 27% of the country is suitable for agriculture and urban settlement. It is prone to volcanic eruptions, earthquakes and tsunamis. There are more than a hundred active volcanoes. More than 140,000 people died in the Tokyo earthquake of 1923. The 2011 magnitude 9.0 earthquake off the Pacific coast of Tōhoku killed about 18,000 people and triggered several nuclear accidents.

From a natural disaster point of view Japan is the most dangerous place in the developed world.

Japan Islands

Looking from China, Japan lies in the direction of the rising sun, hence the way Japan is rendered in Kanji is 日本. The Chinese character 日 means sun or day; means base or origin, combined they convey the meaning sunrise.

The population is about 126 million people and slowly declining. The population density is high in the areas suitable for settlement.

Japan has the third largest economy in the world, but things aren’t quite as great as they used to be.

Life expectancy ranks second in the world. The infant mortality rate of 2 per thousand live births is as low as any where in the world. Educational standards are high.

Virtually no one shoots anyone else in Japan but they make up for that to some extent by killing themselves. Suicide is the leading cause of death in people under thirty.

The whole place is in one time zone (GMT +9hrs) and they don’t mess with the clocks for summertime.

The electricity supply is 100 volts (not 120 like the US or 240 like Australia and the UK) the plugs and sockets are 2 pin connections compatible with their American counterparts.

The climate is officially described as temperate. What this means is that it’s mild in the south. Tokyo is hot and humid in summer and cold in the winter, not a threat to your ears and nose but remember the hat and gloves. Hokkaido is mild in the summer and definitely a threat to the extremities in winter, don’t leave home without your parka.

Wildlife has done well in Japan, bears, deer, voles, shrews, deer, mustelids and monkeys can all be found and the bird life is exceptional. The mountains have helped preserve habitat and modern Japan seems conservation minded. There are well managed wildlife reserves. And surprisingly it is a good place to go whale watching!

The birding is heavily influenced by the strong seasonality and the proximity to land north and south and there is always the chance of vagrants coming from the Asian mainland.

The only English language field guide worth having (for the moment) is … A Field Guide to the Birds of East Asia (2009), by Mark Brazil.

Got all that? Cool. It’s time to go.