I had plans to “do” Oslo by public transport and foot today but
in the end it was a lot of foot and just a little public transport. I walked at
least 15km and felt that I deserved a good result which I did in fact get
although not a bird.
My route took me via the little park at Marienlyst which
held a Med Gull a couple of winters ago. No Med Gull but this park continues to
hold the vast majority of Oslo’s over-wintering Common Gulls (fiskemåke) with
over 100 present. There was just a single Herring Gull (gråmåke) here plus 3
B-h Gulls (hettemåke). Elsewhere in town it is nearly only Herring Gulls one
encounters but for some reason this park has monopolised Common Gulls but
excluded the Herrings. The reason the park is popular is that a string of old
ladies feed the birds here which also explains the 8 Collared Doves (tyrkerdue)
and over 100 House Sparrows (gråspurv).
In Frognerparken there were 5 wintering Teal (krikkand) plus
2 adult Grey Herons (gråhegre) feeding in the stream. I reached the fjord at
Frognerkilen and then walked the waterfront all the way to the Opera. I was
hoping for a rare gull, some auks or a diver or grebe. Well none of that
happened – it was depressingly quite. At Aker Brygge (very downtown Oslo) I
walked up to the waters edge to scan hoping for a Little Auk and nearly straightaway
heard the snort of a breathing cetacean. Looking down there was a dolphin less
than 10 metres from me!! I realised that a couple of other people standing
nearby were already watching it and it amazingly stayed in the same small area
for the next 40 minutes I was there. It would be under for around three minutes
before coming up to breathe when it would break the surface between 3 and 5
times before diving again. A couple of times it rolled onto its side but there
were no acrobatics to witness. A Bottle-nosed Dolphin (tumler) has been
reported every now again in the Inner Oslofjord since May and has been filmed
by others see here including it jumping and here from the same location on Christmas day and I was sure this had to be
the same animal but was it really a Bottle-nose I was watching? It did not
resemble the Bottle-noses I’ve seen in dolphinariums or on TV but after
studying my pictures I can see that it is and it was just very hard to see the
head properly as it never really held its head out of the water. Filming it was
also difficult as I never knew where it would come up and it was up so briefly
each time. It was also so close that it was difficult getting a wide field of
view.
My video where you can here the dolphin snorting and me sniffing. The bells are from the Oslo Town Hall at noon:
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rolling on its side |
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the white mark on the left hand side of the dorsal fin is a good character to identify this individual. Notice also the blow hole |
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here it looks more like a pilot whate |
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but this shot shows the distinct "bottle nose" |
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Grey Heron in Frognerpark |
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another attempt at low shutter speed artiness |
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Great Tit in the Botanical Gardens where I ended my day |
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Hawfinch and Fieldfare in Botanical Gardens |
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some Common Gulls, like this one, have a pink hue to their underparts but it is not captured so vividly in this photo as I experienced it live |
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