Magpie Goose Dry-Season Congregation — Kakadu
As the dry season shrinks Kakadu's floodplains to isolated billabongs, tens of thousands of magpie geese — a species unchanged since the Pleistocene — converge on Mamukala Wetlands in honking, wheeling masses that fill the sky at dawn and dusk, watched from a dedicated observation platform.
About this spectacle
As Kakadu's wet-season floodplains contract under the dry-season sun, the remaining water at Mamukala Wetlands becomes a magnet for tens of thousands of magpie geese. These prehistoric-looking birds — black-and-white, knob-headed, and virtually unchanged since the Pleistocene — gather in roaring, honking flocks that rise in dark, wheeling masses against the orange dawn sky. From a dedicated observation platform visitors watch wave after wave of birds lift off across the billabong, their calls merging into a constant, resonant chorus. The air smells of reed and mud; the ground vibrates with wingbeats. At dusk the spectacle reverses as birds return to roost, silhouettes streaming across a sky turning crimson over the floodplain. The platform setting makes the experience accessible and comfortable, yet the sheer scale of the congregation feels utterly wild and overwhelming.
When to go
May — Oct, peak Jun — Sep
Getting there
Nearest airport: DRW. Nearest city: Darwin.
Booking options
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