I have had a couple of very intensive and enjoyable guiding
assignments to Hedmark and Oppland over the last few days but I am now finally home and
ready to report on what we saw (this the first of two instalments).
On Wednesday I was guiding to some of Southern Norway's
specialities. The birding day which had begun with a 4am alarm started well
when we heard what is quite possibly the only Rustic Bunting to have returned
to the Norwegian breeding grounds this year. Unusually for me and this species
it was an easy find as he was singing frequently and strongly (I have used
hours and hours to find them on other years) but this is bad news as it means
he was unpaired. I feel this will be my last encounter with this globally
rapidly declining species on its Norwegian taiga breeding grounds.
After this we had a nice encounter with breeding Little Gulls but our attempt
to get a variety of breeding waders including Broad-billed Sand was thwarted by
a mountain toll road suddenly and without notice being blocked just a few
kilometres after we had paid to open the barrier.
With the Rustic having been so cooperative we still had plenty of time
available to us though so we headed for my own special Red-necked Phalarope
site. When we got there and it was cold and windy with all vegetation still
brown and no mossies on the water I really felt we were not going to be lucky
(the species has only just started returning to Norway with the first record
only 10 days ago). We walked around a small lake though which has always been
good for the species and suddenly a male appeared on the water in front of us.
He swam away from us and at one stage hopped up and dived down as though he was
catching a small fish. We admired it and then walked on a couple of paces only
for a bright female to fly up from just a couple of metres away and land on the
water. Things then happened very quickly. It didn't occur to me that they might
already be breeding and given that it is the male that incubated and he was on
the water I initially thought that when the female quickly returned to land
that she was just looking for food as land was perhaps the only place to find
any insects. The way she ran around like a rodent made me reconsider and then
when she stopped and made some strange movements I noticed she was standing
over an egg I realised we must have interrupted egg laying. I tried to find the
nest which was no more than 4 metres from me but only found a single egg laying
on damp mossy ground. I initially thought this to be another egg but looking at
my pictures and video I now think it is the same egg – but there was no nest
there it was just lying on the ground!! [If it was another egg as I thought
at the time then what the hell were two random eggs doing there] Immediately
after I considered that this couldn’t possibly be a nest and my
assumption is that we interrupted egg laying at just the wrong moment and the
female just dropped an egg where she. However, reading BWP it says “On ground
in the open, sometimes partly concealed in short vegetation, and may become
more hidden during incubation as vegetation grows; often in top of tussock; of
70 nests, Finland, 55 on dry ground, 15 on moist” so it could well be that this
is the nest and that as more eggs are layed a proper scrape is made?
We immediately moved away and then saw the birds together on
the lake. They seemed to mate and then flew back to land. The female landed
exactly where she had first flown up from which was 4 metres from where the egg
was and the male plopped down right nearby and then both birds disappeared in
the grass. I would love to have been able to return and follow them over the
next couple of days to see if they lay more eggs in the same place. At least
both birds immediately returned (after having mated) once we moved off so I
believe no harm is done and hopefully we were just amazingly lucky enough to
witness normal egg laying – right time at the right place-
So now I am left remembering an amazing close encounter with a wonderful
species which happened so fast that I am glad I also videoed some of it and we
actually witness egg laying!
After this we had mixed success. Two owl species that I was hoping to find
didn't reveal themselves but we did have an adult and two young Hawkies - and a
day is always good after a dose of Hawkie :-)
Generally though the day was very short of birds. Hirundines and swifts seemed
very common but warblers, waders, flycatchers and chats were almost non-existent.
We also had only a single Cuckoo and raptors consisted of one Rough-legged
Buzzard and three Kestrels.
|
singing male Rustic Bunting (vierspurv) - quite possibly Norway's last and probably singing in vain |
|
Red-necked Phalarope (svømmesnipe) - the drab(er) plumage shows it to be a male |
|
the more colourful female |
|
just layed an egg. Note the webbed feet |
|
adult Hawk Owl (haukugle) |
|
youngster #1 |
|
youngster #2 |
|
breeding Little Gulls (dvergmåke) - note the right hand bird has nesting material |
|
singing Wood Warbler (bøksanger) |
No comments:
Post a Comment