The Red-Tailed Tropicbird was the bird I was most looking forward to seeing on my recent trip to Lord Howe Island. This magnificent bird is used a great deal in the publicity shots for the island, so I was keen to see one (or more) for myself.
I saw some of these birds on the second day I was there, during my climb up Mount Gower. I think I was the only person in that group who became excited at the sight of these birds, which may be explained by the fact that the walk itself was pretty tough!
I got much better views later in the week, and I was once more very pleased to be in the digital age of photography. Photographing moving, almost pure white birds against a bright blue sky was a bit of a challenge - and I got better results from my second set of efforts than the first!
I got great views of these birds doing their courtship flights where they circle around each other in the air. I was also pointed in the direction of a bird that was nesting on the ground. While this bird was determinedly hidden in bush, I was surprised at how big they were.
The bird has a rather short tail apart from the long red tail streamers that give the bird its common name. This means the birds look a bit stubby in flight. Their tendency to use their outstretched feet as air brakes also add a somewhat inelegant look to these birds - but they are wonderful to watch.
Their formal name -
Phaethon rubricauda - means 'red-tailed shiner' and in bright light they live up to that name.
This post is a bit image heavy - they really are wonderful birds. If I saw one bird that made the trip to LHI worth while it was this bird - and I saw many more as well!
I think you may get a better view of the pictures by clicking on one and having a look at them as a 'gallery.
Now it's your turn - click the blue button on off you go.