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ABOUT
>Graham Taylor.
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My Name is Graham Franklin Taylor I was born in the state
of New South Wales, Australia. I have kept and bred parrots
and cockatoos since the age of nine. I have been actively
involved in aviculture all my adult life. When I was a teenager
in Sydney, I dreamed of someday owning a Bird park. In 1972,
that dream was realised when my wife and I opened the Australian
Bird Park at Palm Cove just north of Cairns in Queensland.
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The
aim of this park was to establish captive breeding programs for
some of the threatened Australian and exotic parrots and cockatoos.
Prior to establishing the bird park, I was a breeder of Australian
black cockatoos. During this time, I was credited with the 1st
breeding in captivity of the White-tail Black Cockatoo, Calyptorhynchus
funerus latirostris. At the bird park in 1974, I was credited
with the 1st breeding in captivity of the Red-browed Fig Parrot,
Psittaculirostris diopthalma; this was one of Australia’s rarest
parrots.
In 1978 our family sold the bird park and returned to NSW. In
1986 I was asked by Lord Alistair McAlpine of London to put together
a collection of Australian and exotic birds for his new Zoo that
he was establishing in Broome, Western Australia. This task became
a real challenge that involved organising and shipping birds to
this remote part of Australia. It was not long before I was asked
to meet Lord McAlpine at his hotel in Sydney, and at this meeting
I was asked to take up the position of curator of birds at the
zoo in Broome. I was given 24 hours to make up my mind and was
also told that I would be expected to take up that position within
two weeks. After frantic discussions with my wife and family we
packed up, sold our home and moved to Broome, Western Australia.
The first three years in Broome were difficult, to say the least.
Once I had set up the bird keeping staff to the way I wanted things
done and the construction crew had finished all 300 aviaries,
it was time to start setting up our breeding programs. From 1986
to 1990, many species of birds and animals arrived at the zoo.
Lord McAlpine was very involved in captive breeding and species
management programs and a number of species were bred for the
first time. One of these was the Australian Eclectus Parrot Eclectus,
roratus macgillivrayi. In 1988 I was made Director of the Zoo
and was responsible for 39 staff, 1500 birds and 150 mammals.
In 1993 my family and I moved back to NSW to concentrate on the
captive breeding of Eclectus Parrots.
My son David and I developed the Aviculture breeding and research
centre at Bonville, NSW from 1993 to 2000. Here we bred many parrot
and cockatoo species for the aviculture industry. Species housed
at Bonville were New Guinea Eclectus, Vosmaer's Eclectus, Grand
Eclectus, Australian Eclectus, Red Lory, Chattering Lory, Janday
Conure, Sun Conure, Peach-fronted Conure, Nanday Conure, Monk
Parrot, Blue & Gold Macaw, Golden-shouldered Parrot, Hooded
Parrot, Northern Rosella, Naretha Blue Bonnet, Plumheaded Parrot,
Derbyan Parrot, Slatyhead Parrot, Alexandrine Parrot, Red-browed
Fig Parrot, Major Mitchell Cockatoo, and the Kimberley Red Collared
Lorikeet. In 2000 the family decided to retire from business so
the bird collection and business was sold.
In October 2000 I decided to write a book on a species of parrot
that has been an important part of my life. This, of course, was
the Eclectus Parrot. In 2003, the book entitled, “Eclectus Parrots
An Experience,” was published and sold around the world. I am
currently putting the finishing touches to the 2nd edition (2007)
that I hope will be available for release in 2008.
Graham Taylor.
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