After yesterday’s signs of spring I thought that a visit to
Kurefjorden today might turn up something. Initially I found very little with a
light mist not helping things but eventually it brightened up a bit and a few
birds showed themselves.
Four Shelduck were my first of the year and a quite an early
record. Greylag Geese numbered 106 and such a high number so early is I think a
sign of the ever increasing feral population and the competition for breeding
sites. There were quite a few Great Crested Grebes and Velvet Scoters on the
water and amongst them were five Red-throated Divers but I found no scarcer
grebes, divers or ducks. Highlight was a flock of six Purple Sandpipers on a
distant rock. The rock was small but the sandpipers managed to be out of sight
more than they were in so it was luck that I found them.
On the way home I scored with three Great Grey Shrikes in
the Golden Shrike Triangle but surprisingly this was not the three birds I have
though were wintering here but actually confirmation that there are four
territories in such a small area. There have been sightings of a bird at
Årungen which is less than 1km from the northern territory so I have assumed
this related to one and the same bird. Today however I saw birds at both sites
within 2 minutes of each other confirming that there actually two different
territories. I have updated my map over these territories showing how small the
territories are and how close they come to each other.
A Great Grey Owl was found today near Larvik about an hour
and a half drive from Oslo and with a Hawk Owl along the way I think I know
where I may be heading tomorrow....
Distant Purple Sandpipers (fjæreplytt). The island is 650m away |
my first Red-throated Diver (smålom) of 2016 |
and my first Shelduck (gravand) here together with Eiders (ærfugl) |
the small rock in the middle of the picture is where the Purple Sands were |
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