FOR CARMEN
Carmen was one of three Italian girls who came to WWOOF for me in August. Recently she wrote to ask:
Hi Fay,
I am writing a text about my experience by you. I remember a strange story about the name of a bird, which you tell us but I don’t remember the whole story. could you help me, please? could you also tell me something about the methods you use to improve your garden. I wrote something about the use of jelly, molasses, compost, fence against birds, and the practice of burning grass. Could you explain me something more about it?
Thank you very much. Best regards to Eberhard and you!
I wondered, had I told them about the Kookaburra, the laughing Jackass? The Kookaburra belongs to the Kingfisher family and as such are carnivores. They sit on a branch looking for any movement in the grass below. They will snap up a snake and beat it against a branch of a tree, or drop it from a height to stun it. Two kookaburras may even join forces, one on each end of the snake to pull it apart. They will eat the snake. In the winter time when snakes are hibernating and other prey may be scarce they will perch along my garden fence, looking for little frogs or lizards. They often frequent picnic grounds for a free handout. They will come regularly for feeding if people begin throwing them meat scraps.

Kookaburra by David Osburg.
We have several family groups of Kookaburras on our farm. They cluster together every evening on a tree branch and laugh. Our overseas Wwoofers often think this noisy “Hoo-hoo, ha-ha, hoo-ha” type call is the chattering of monkeys in the trees, but Australia has no monkeys. Due to this chorus of laughter these birds are sometimes called the Laughing Jackass.
The Kookaburras cluster and laugh shortly after dusk and again laugh in the morning at first light before dispersing for the day.
In the spring season there is much laughing throughout the day as the male Kookaburras compete to claim territory.
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