Rara Avis …

Towards the end of the first century Juvenal, the Roman satirist, was wont to say “Rara avis in terris nigroque simillima cygno.” Which translates as “A rare bird in the lands, and very like a black swan.” which is as polite a way of saying “bullshit” that I have ever come across. Every European knew that all swans are white so someone claiming to have seen something as rare as a black swan was clearly lying.

Willem de Vlamingh put an end to that fallacy in 1697 when he came eye to eye with Black Swans on the river now known as the Swan River in a place now known as Perth, Western Australia. He grabbed a few but sadly they died on the way back to Holland.

Most Australians grow up seeing only black swans. They might well turn Juvenal’s saying around “A rare bird in the lands, and very like a white swan, mate” but they would probably just say “Bullshit”. However there is in WA not far from Perth a colony of white swans. A brief history can be found on a sign on the banks of the River Avon at Northam …

Just how naturally they live there is a moot point. The River Avon extends in a very similar fashion up and down stream but for some reason the swans rarely travel far from Northam.

Our journey today took us from Cervantes to York, the oldest inland Town in WA.

That concludes our exploration of the west coast for now. Tomorrow we will bush camp at Karalee Rock then it’s onto the Eyre Highway bound for South Australia. Updates may be scarce for a few days.

Northam, another day out …

Northam is a town of about six and a half thousand people situated just under 100km from Perth on the very picturesque Avon River. When we had a camper-trailer with wheels it was on our itinerary for its silo art. Instead we made it a day trip.

The silos get mixed reviews which they thoroughly deserve. Parking and visibility are not good. At one end there is a collection of coloured blobs that are very colourful and the very epitome of blob whilst the other end is much more quirky and does engage the intellect more thoroughly.

We had a picnic lunch down by the river and admired the plastics. This is an Australian twitcher term for introduced species. The Mute Swan was introduced to Australia in 1886 and on further occasions until 1920. It has persisted at some of the sites to which it was introduced including the Avon at Northam. We hadn’t seen it in Oz before.

Mute Swan

The Laughing Turtle-Dove was introduced to Perth from about 1898 and has been a much more successful immigrant having spread throughout the Western Australian wheat belt and beyond.

Laughing Turtle-Dove

The pleasant gardens along the river were also home to some real Aussie birds including Ringneck Parrots and New Holland Honeyeaters.