Initially, he thought it was a feral cat but the eyes were too far apart and they shone white-yellow, not the vivid white-blue of a cat.
Sure enough, it was a large healthy-looking male Koala!
The big bloke was found in the middle of the reserve amongst a large stand of Gum-topped Box or Grey Box (Eucalyptus moluccana) one of the stronger food plant preferences for koalas in the far north Queensland region.
We believe he's a Yourka resident, not a tourist, as their home range is around one to two hectares and Yourka spans 43,500 hectares!
Although we’re all very excited to finally see a koala at Yourka, we’re not totally surprised.
The reserve sits on the northernmost edge of the Koala’s distribution and there have been very irregular sightings of Koalas in the district over the decade that we’ve been managing the reserve. It’s likely there are others although they'll probably be in low numbers this far north.
When you listen to the call you have to think that it’s probably lucky that the two CWM volunteers who were out sitting on a track in the dark on a reserve far from anywhere were from south-east Queensland and recognised it for what it was.
Otherwise, the Yourka growler could have really put the wind up them!