I had two birding
goals for today: to find a Great Grey Shrike (varsler) which have been scarce
this winter and also to find a white-winged gull of some description. I
therefore chose the areas around Drøbak to the south of Oslo which held up to 3
Iceland Gulls (grønlandsmåke) a few winters ago. On the gull front I failed to
impress but I had double joy with the Shrikes with different birds only 3km
away from each other and which if I hadn’t seen them both within a five minute
window I would have assumed to be the same bird as they can have large winter
territories.
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Great Grey Shrike #1 |
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Great Grey Shrike #2. I had a bird in exactly the sae tree 1 December so this bird seems to have found a food rich winter territory |
This winter is
proving very poor for Crossbills (grankorsnebb) and Redpolls (gråsisik) over
the whole of Norway with presumably a very poor spruce crop the reason. Siskins
(grønnsisik) however seem quite common, at least around Oslo, and a flock of
over 20 have made the garden home and have tripled the consumption of sunflower
seed hearts in.
In Maridalen a
flock of 19 Hawfinches (kjernebiter) is probably the highest number I have ever
seen together and were feeding at a garden feeding station that also proved
popular last winter. For me the photo opportunities from the road were poor but
from inside the house they would have been superb!
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male Siskin in the garden |
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female Siskin |
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many of the males including this one were singing and the female seemed quite interested. Siskins can start breeding in late winter if there is lots of food available |
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