Birds Of A Feather
by Keith Wollaston, Delamere, South Australia
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", April 1992, page 23
The Australian National Railways are removing their communications line
across the Nullarbor Plain (Transcontinental Railway). Nullarbor, I believe,
stands for Null- NO, Arbor - TREE. Anyway, the Nullarbor Plain is a vast area
north of the Great Australian Bight -- between Perth and Adelaide. On the
Nullarbor, there are 300 miles of gun barrel straight tracks.
Anyway, given that there are no (or very few!) trees on the Nullarbor, the
birds have taken to nesting in telephone poles. Man has brought food and water
to the desert -- telephone poles provide a place to nest.
ANR are considering
leaving one pole in every 100 for the birds to use for nests! On my recent
inquiry, a decision had yet to be made. Let's hope they save some poles for the
birds and for the insulator collectors to look at. Before much longer, there
will be no telephone poles left in Australia.
The enclosed photographs are taken
at Peterborough - SA mid. north district. Nullarbor is too far and too isolated
and dangerous for me to travel in my old car alone.
The birds have chosen the familiar
bottle-shaped porcelain insulators as
neighbors.
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