Årnestangen is always a good bet in August and better
coverage would most certainly turn up the odd rarity or two. I took my bike in
the car and therefore shaved an hour off the return trip out to the end of the
peninsula. When I first got out there I was glad for it as I struggled
initially to find any waders although there were about 400 Cormorants
(storskarv) resting and also two Peregrines (vandrefalk) which could well have
scared off the waders just before I arrived. However over the course of the
next couple of hours small numbers of waders came and went although numbers
were never large. Best birds were a single juv. Curlew Sandpiper (tundrasnipe) which
was feeding amongst grass close to the observation platform and gave a rare
photo opportunity at this location where a telescope is normally required. A
single Little Stint (dvergsnipe) was in addition to the Curlew Sand a year tick
but this bird vanished soon after I arrived to be replaced later by 4
Temminck’s Stints which just appeared from nowhere. Ruff (brushane) were the
most numerous with 31 birds with 12 Ringed Plover (sandlo) and 10 Dunlin (myrsnipe)
being much fewer than had been seen recently. All the Dunlin were juveniles but
there were a couple of adult Ringed Plovers.
Raptors put on a good show with three different Marsh
Harriers (sivhauk), 5 Common Buzzards (musvåk), 4 Sparrowhawks (spurvehauk), 2
Ospreys (fiskeørn) and a Honey Buzzard (vepsevåk) in addition to the 2
Peregrines.
My rural idyll at Årnestangen was brutally disturbed three
times by messages concerning what would appear to a new Caspian Gull in Oslo
and therefore the third in three days. The last message said simply “mugged” –
nice to know someone reads this blog! With so many birds in Oslo and only a few
hundred Herring Gulls to go through I feel that a quick surgical strike may be
possible. I am therefore already starting my psychological preparations for a
quick in and out trip tomorrow. I have a map ready showing all places where I
may find passerines, clean air or see the horizon in case I need to suddenly
make a break for freedom.
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one of the smartest juvenile waders - Curlew Sandpiper (tundrasnipe) |
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juvenile Marsh Harrier (sivhauk) - it can be aged due its very fresh plumage |
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juvenile Ringed Plover (sandlo) - this small individual caused me a few problems especially as it was beside a larger and more typical bird. |
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some of the hundreds of Cormorants (storskarv). Initially all resting on the mudbanks they took off in small groups and found a shoal of fish which they hunted as a flock |
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