After posting on the blog and
recording my observations on the national reporting system last night there was
little time left for sleep especially as I planned to wake up at dawn to check
out Maridalsvannet before breakfast. I awoke a bit later than planned and very
tired but was on the patch at 0640. The flock of geese from yesterday afternoon
had roosted on the lake and were in a tight ball. They started flying off north
just after I arrived and there were ca.800 Pink-feet (kortnebbgås) and 88
Greylags (grågås) which was a few more than we saw yesterday. I managed to read
two neck collars on the Pink-feet which I had seen yesterday but at too long
range. The birds were H25 and S22 and from the geese.org website I see that
birds were both ringed on 02.08.2012 in Svalbard (the breeding grounds for this
population) and have been seen on migration in mid Norway and wintering in
Denmark.
After breakfast I was back in
Maridalen until lunch and had some nice migration. Pink-feets started migrating
again from 1012 and were presumably birds direct from Denmark. I had 4 flocks
totalling 376 birds. Four Sparrowhawks (spurvehauk) also migrated north but the
larger raptor migration that I hoped for (the weather improved during the
morning and the sun came out) did not materialse although it could have occurred
during the afternoon. I also had singles of Buzzard (musvåk), Goshawk (hønsehauk)
and Kestrel (tårnfalk) but these were not actively migrating. On the lake were
the pair of Red-breasted Mergansers (siland) still, 3 Black-throated Divers (storlom)
and a single Red-throated Diver (smålom) plus 5 Curlew (storspove) resting on
an island which attempted to migrate north but turned round and returned to
sleep on the island. Apart from Lapwings (vipe) the only other wader I had was
my first two Green Sandpipers (skogsnipe) for the year which migrated north.
With falling rain there were far
fewer passerines on the fields although a few Bramblings (bjørkefink) made
themselves known amongst the Chaffinches (bokfink)and overhead there were
Fieldfares (gråtrost) and Chaffinches heading north. A (yesterdays?) Lapland
Bunting (lappspurv) flew over calling with some Reed Buntings (sivspurv) and
looked like it was making a local flight so may reappear in the area. And
finally a Chiffchaff (gransanger) was feeding and calling in sallows but wasn’t
quite brave enough to sing yet.
|
male Brambling (bjørkefink) still coming into summer plumage |
|
Chiffchaff (gransanger) |
|
this picture wasn't planned.. |
|
this drone was being flown by a couple of guys half a kilometre away and buzzed me rather annoyingly |
|
male Great Spotted Woodpecker (flaggspett) |
|
female Kestrel (tårnfalk) ripping into an unidentified prey item |
|
ca.800 Pink-footed and a few Greylag Geese in a tight ball - certainly doesn't look like so many |
|
on their way north. The two neck collared birds are in the top row just left of centre |
No comments:
Post a Comment