COAST MAGAZINE SUMMER 2021/22 ISSUE

Page 68

© DAVID DE GROOT DDGP.COM.AU

The chime of bellbirds. What does it say to you?

F

or many, driving down the hill at Kariong, with the car windows down on a summer day, the tink of bellbirds was the signal for, ‘We’re here; our holiday has begun!’ For others of ‘a certain age’, the sound recalls school poetry assignments from the 1960s and 1970s when Henry Kendall’s poem, Bell Birds was ‘approved reading’ in schools. And it seems, many a visitor to Henry Kendall Cottage in West Gosford can still quote every line from the first stanza of that poem. But the association of bellbirds with Gosford and Henry Kendall goes back even further – to 1867 when Henry’s beloved poem was first published. The poet became a well-known figure in the area during the 1870s when he stayed with the Fagan family in West Gosford after the death of his daughter and the onset of his subsequent health issues. The bellbird became an unofficial mascot for the Central Coast, often featuring on postcards, and as a symbol associated with brands including the Bellbird Caravan Park in Terrigal, a cricket team, and the Gosford High School student newsletter. Henry Kendall, on the other hand, left behind his name engraved in a rock or two in a gully that was known as Kendall’s Glen. A great fan of Kendall, by the name of Henry Lawson, later tried unsuccessfully to locate the rock, but it remained a local myth until 1909 when the librarian from the Gosford School of Arts claimed to be the first to rediscover it ‘beside a beautiful pool and overhanging ferns and beds of bracken’.

68 COAST

Strangely enough, for such an often-heard but seldom-seen bird, urbanisation has helped its numbers grow. Its main habitat was traditionally around the edges of rainforests and in gullies, but with the spread of weeds such as lantana, a new protective understorey allowed it to nest well outside its usual domain. Bellbirds can scare off other birds, and insects otherwise eaten by those birds began to thrive in such numbers that native trees suffered from dieback. So the tall, bare trunks and branches you see haunting our tree lines, may well be for whom the bellbirds toll. Bell Birds, by Henry Kendall By channels of coolness the echoes are calling, And down the dim gorges I hear the creek falling; It lives in the mountain where moss and the sedges Touch with their beauty the banks and ledges. Through breaks of the cedar and sycamore bowers Struggles the light that is love to the flowers. And, softer than slumber and sweeter than singing, The notes of the bellbirds are running and ringing.

Source: Tales from the Rainforest: History and Heritage on the NSW Central Coast, by Peter Fisher (2020). Available to order on facebook.com/Tales-from-the-rainforest or email peterfishercentralcoast@gmail.com


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Articles inside

Sugar-detoxing your little sugar addict

4min
pages 122-124

36 hours in … Port Stephens

4min
pages 114-115

GARDENS OF THE COAST Coastal profusion. Garden designer Peter Nixon’s tropic-inspired space

5min
pages 108-113

DESTINATION WEDDINGS How we met: Brett and Robbie

3min
pages 104-107

FEATURE Stonewall equestrian showground, Mangrove Mountain

6min
pages 94-97

Great North Road bike hike: Bucketty Convict Wall to Wisemans Ferry

4min
pages 99-103

to violin virtuoso

4min
pages 88-89

Long Jetty art scene: Glenn McKimmin Gallery Charmian Gadd: from a barefoot childhood

1min
pages 86-87

Happenings on the Coast

4min
pages 90-93

Art confidence is changing our taste in art

3min
pages 84-85

The Sitting Duck, Peats Ridge

1min
pages 66-67

Sarah Samild, curator, Gosford Regional Gallery

2min
pages 82-83

Eden and Louise Fanelli

4min
pages 52-55

Luxury escapes

2min
pages 46-51

COASTING ALONG Living outside your comfort zone

3min
pages 70-73

Dana Chantler, the chef from Whistler

3min
pages 56-57

FEATURE The chime of bellbirds. What does it say to you?

2min
pages 68-69

A sea view as far as you can see the view

4min
pages 40-45

PEOPLE OF THE COAST Shirley Hadley, the first Mingara MY COAST

2min
pages 26-27

Dinner parties are back

2min
pages 24-25

Bridges of the Central Coast

6min
pages 9-17

The Quarters at Forresters Beach

2min
pages 18-19

Laura Wells

6min
pages 28-31

Can wholefoods be tasty foods?

2min
page 20

FEATURE Koalas on the Coast

5min
pages 32-39

WELCOME

2min
pages 6-7
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