I needed a good day to lift me out of the doldrums currently
being caused by a severe case of Trump Fatigue Syndrome and I got it – thank you
bird gods!
The day started with the Sørkedalen Hawk Owl before 9am.
This bird has been seen very occasionally over the last two months (although
not by me) and is clearly using a large area in its search for food. It was
reported at dusk yesterday though and I figured that it might still be in the
same area early this morning and thankfully it was. Sat on top of the same tall
spruce as where I’d seen it on 30 Nov the light was pants but I decided to
stick with it in case it hunted. It did indeed hunt unseen by me whilst I was
watching a couple of Goldcrests and it took me a while to find the bird again
when it eventually flew up from the ground to the top of the spruce. I don’t
know whether it caught anything but 10 minutes later if flew down again but
pulled up at the last minute and perched low down in a tree. I hastily made my
round to where it was and then watched it plunge down to the ground amongst the
trees. It clearly had caught something and flew up onto a low stump where it
then proceeded to drop its prey and then flew off without making any attempt to
recover it. I went over and found a Common Shrew (krattspissmus) on the ground.
It was amongst some branches and may well have been difficult for the owl to
recover although it seems such a rookie mistake to drop breakfast (the shrew
was well and truly dead) that I believe the owl simply discarded the shrew. Why,
I don’t know but it was a tiny creature and maybe they don’t taste so good?
I picked up the shrew and threw it out a few times but
without gaining any interest from the owl which then got mobbed by a couple of
crows and moved to an even higher spruce. I figured that I needed to be able to
move the shrew around if I was going to be able it to use to attract the owl
but had no string with me. I drove to nearest shop and they had no string but
did have dental floss! On my return though I couldn’t find the owl but do now
have a shrew in the freezer for use another time and no excuse not to floss J
After this Fornebu was deadly quiet although a flock of 60
Siskin was maybe a sign that this species is on the move as it has been an incredibly
scarce species so far this winter.
I checked out the dump again for gulls without finding
anything interesting in the few minutes I had with them before something unseen
sent they all up in the air. I then retired home and was enjoying some cheddar
cheese when I had a text asking me to confirm the identity of an Iceland Gull
at Østensjøvannet. Anne Kari Norland had struck gold again! 20 minutes later
and I was enjoying this bird too. It sat on the ice looking very at home and
joined the local Herring Gulls in scrapping for bread. The pattern on one of
the coverts on the left wing shows this to be the same bird that I have missed
in Østfold and Akershus so third time lucky! It was also a large bird being the
same size as many of the Herring Gulls so is therefore likely to be a male. Iceland
and Glaucous Gulls on successive days in Oslo plus Hawk Owl is definitely what
I needed although the optical stabiliser on the bazooka giving it up the ghost
did take some of the shine off the day. Bring it on Grumpy Trump!
2nd winter Iceland Gull (grønlandsmåke) Østensjøvannet Oslo |
here it is having a drink to try to help some bread go down |
I bet there are sweaty palms out there as the bling givers are planning how the Iceland Gull will suffer the fate of the poor Herring Gull |
all the gulls flew off at one stage but not because of a raptor but because someone had dumped a load of bread by the car park. I had completely the wrong settings on the camera to capture action |
here it is flying back with its crop full of bread |
It had obviously swallowed a very large amount and seemed to have problems swallowing it properly |
here a comparison of todays bird with the Langvannet bird 28.01 (photo: Geir Høen) and the Askim bird from 13.01 (photo: Morten Olsen). Note the distinctive pattern on one of the covert feathers |
Hawk Owl in Sørkedalen |
Rodent spotted! but of course the camera was not set for any sort of action |
here you can just make out the bird hovering |
before it gave up and sat low down in a tree |
I was able to go round to the other side of the tree and watch it at head height (a novelty for Hawkie) |
here it has sighted something |
and plunge |
on top of the shrew |
this is where it flew with the shrew and dropped it |
being mobbed by a Crow |
The wintering female Pintail (stjertand) at Østensjøvannet back for its second winter |
one of the Maridalen Great Grey Shrikes (varser) |
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