I teamed up with Jules Bell today who was in town and we
headed for Årnestangen. As usual there is always a lot of excitement and as you
walk the 40 minutes out to the end of the peninsula with the uncertainty of whether
you will actually see anything of note. Today we were not to be disappointed
though. On the way out the sound of calling Cranes (trane) and a high flying
migrating Marsh Harrier (sivhauk) helped keep the excitement levels high as did
a Red-throated Pipit (lappiplerke) that flew up calling in front of us although
when we got to the end and scanned the mud banks I was initially disappointed
as there seemed to be hardly any waders. However as is usual here if you give
it some time then waders just seem to pop up. In the end we had 6 Temminck
Stints, 4 Little Stints (dvergsnipe), 40 Dunlin (myrsnipe) and a few others. One
Little Stint gave us something to work with as we initially found it long range
and it seemed too large for a stint and quite long necked. We started working
through the possibilities before it eventually flew closer and showed it was “just”
a Little Stint but a particularly large individual.
Raptors were the real highlight of the day with a total of 6
different Marsh Harriers seen including an adult female with a hanging broken
leg that has been around for about 3 weeks. We also had numbers of Buzzards
(musvåk), Ospreys (fiskeørn) and Sparrowhawks (spurvehauk) plus singles of
Peregrine (vandrefalk) and Merlin (dvergfalk), with the later hunting Meadow
Pipits (heipiplerke) around us.
A very strange spectacle was 4 Willow Tits (granmeis) that
flew out at the end of the peninsula in a migration attempt but stopped and
tried to land on the observation platform with one actually brushing against
Jule’s face.
By Svellet there are thousands of geese congregating now
mostly Barnacle (hvitkinngås) and Greylag (grågås). Quite where there geese
come from is unknown to me as they do not seem to be part of the local breeding
populations and the Barnacles at least could at least come from the southern
Swedish population.
Today’s pictures are of that old favourite, Red-backed
Shrike (tornskate) but are this time rather good I think.
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