Yesterday due to the constraints I time I dropped Koksa
which is a bay that can hold waders but invariably has very little. I was
therefore a bit annoyed to see that a Black-tailed Godwit (svarthalespove) had
been seen there later in the day. This is a very local species in Norway and
decidedly rare around Oslo and one I have only seen four times in Norway - so
definitely a bird I would try to see. This morning I also only had a pre
breakfast birding window and although I would loved to have been sitting at
Brentetangen waiting to see what the very strong southerly winds would be
bringing I chose Fornebu again. I headed straight to Koksa at 6am and soon
found a godwit but unfortunately a BAR-tailed (lappspove) and not a
BLACK-tailed. Chances of there being two different birds are mighty slim so
looks like one of birdings classic species pairs has yet again set its trap for
the unwary (later confirmed from photos).
This bird gave me a fantastic photo opportunity albeit in crappy light. This species stands out as a large wader when seen in a mixed flock but close up on its own looks very small.
Bar-tailed Godwit (lappspove). With a shutter speed of 1/100 sec you can see the rain bouncing off its back |
what are YOU looking at? |
The wind picked up and it started raining hard such that I hardly saw a single passerine and just a few other waders: 3 Dunlin (myrsnipe), 9 Snipe (enkeltbekkasin), 2 Green Sandpiper (skogsnipe), 12 Lapwing (vipe), a Ringed Plover (sandlo) and a Greenshank (gluttsnipe).
There was nothing for it then but to head for Rolfstangen and see if the winds had managed to push anything this far up the fjord. Despite it really blowing two juvenile Arctic Terns (rødnebbterne) were the only birds that were out of place.
A drive around Fornebu after this once the rain had stopped
showed that passerines were now showing and I had two Red-backed Shrikes
(tornskate) and some Whinchats (buskskvett) from the car.
No comments:
Post a Comment