 37 [page number]

[27.7.47]
CUMBERLAND we saw a pair of GREY CURRAWONGS whose call
 I had forgotten, YELLOW ROBINS whose call was again
 everywhere, YELLOW-TAILED THORNBILLS and STRIATED THORNBILLS
 one of which was so tame that it remained literally
 at our feet as we approached, GREY FANTAILS feeding
 in the rain from branches and over the river,
 KOOKABURRAS (silent again!) and on a stone in the
 middle of the stream a ROSE ROBIN -  the existence of
 which I had completely forgotten.

11, 13.8.47 [margin] 8 [/margin]
  On these two windy showery days I got calls to
 Larpent. MAGPIES were plentiful everywhere, particularly
 by a pine plantation. From the ground on the windward
 side they would rise and sweep up and backwards over
 the pines. MAGPIE-LARKS were all round water and farms.
 The NATIVE THRUSHES were extremely common on the roads by
 young plantations and by farms where also were WILLIE- 
 WAGTAILS +[and] SCARLET ROBINS. A pair of EASTERN ROSELLAS rose
 from the trees by a stream and nearby a flock of
 GOLDFINCHES on a haystack was watched over by a
 BROWN HAWK perched on a fence-post.
14.8.47 [margin] 19 [/margin] 
A call came to go down to Yeodene. MAGPIES +[and] MAGPIE-
 LARKS were plentiful throughout the open country. On
 Ball's Dam were PURPLE-WATER-HENS just where I had
 always remembered seeing them, feeding on the
 banks by the most "rushy" part of the dam. On