I am now finally at home after a long and very enjoyable
summer holiday in northern Norway. I have lots of things to write about but it
will take time to go through all my pictures and videos. By the end of the
holiday I had filled up all three camera memory cards I had with me, I had no
room left on my mobile phone and the hard drive on the PC was also full. I got
to the stage where I was forced in the field to spend time deleting photos just
so I could take new ones and this resulted in a number of missed opportunities.
At home I have now had to make (lots of) room on the PC before I could download
from the camera and have enough free memory such that I am able to edit videos.
That part of the job is now done and I just have all the
thousands of pictures to go through. I will start with the very end of my trip
when on my drive home (the ladies took the night train home from Bodø) I spent
the night near Beitostølen which we hadn’t visited this summer but which I felt
the need to visit if only for a day. My specific goal was to see male Pallid
Harriers. Amazingly enough at least three males have been noted in June and
July along Jotunheimsvegen which is a scenic tourist road running between
Valdresflya and Beitostølen. They are clearly taking advantage of good numbers
of rodents in the area and there have also been reports of numbers of Hen
Harriers, Short-eared Owls, Rough-legged Buzzards and Kestrels also attracted
to the area.
When I arrived on Thursday evening there was low cloud and
rain and I spent over three hours searching before I finally found a Pallid at
21:20 (I had seen a male and a female Hen Harrier). It was perched on a fence
post right by the road but flew just as I tried to take a photo. It did then
show well in the scope for about 10 minutes although distance and light didn’t
make for good photos before it disappeared behind a hillside. I slept in the
car and awoke before 7am expecting even worse weather which had been forecast
but it was actually better light, with higher cloud than the previous evening,
no rain and even the odd short period of sunlight.
I had to search again although the search was enlivened by
Short-eared Owls and a couple of Hen Harriers but then finally at 0845 as I was
driving along I saw a suspicious grey lump on a rock and it was a male Pallid!!
I was able to watch him well mostly perched but also flying and once being
mobbed by a Kestrel. I also managed to get fairly close although the light was
still not the best. I enjoyed this bird until 09:25 before it disappeared
around a hillside. I returned to the car and went searching for it and at 10:00
when I was around 2km away I saw a male Pallid Harrier. It looked like a different
bird but after a while I managed to convince myself it must be the same bird
with the perceived differences in wing pattern and moult being down to posture
and lighting. I enjoyed this bird until 1020 before it too disappeared around a
hillside heading in the direction of my first sighting.
I tried unsuccessfully to relocate the bird before widening
my search and driving the 2km to the scene of the first sighting and bang! at
10:40 there was a male Pallid sitting on a rock right by the road. It was on
the wrong side of the car meaning I had to drive close before I could get an
angle for a photo but this time I did manage a couple of shots before it flew.
Watching it in flight I gradually had to accept that there were two birds as
this was clearly the same bird as I saw at the same site earlier in the morning
but was also clearly not the same bird I had seen 2km away just 20 minutes earlier
as the differences in moult and wing tip pattern were consistently different
and could not be explained anymore by light or posture. I was able to watch
this bird for around 10 minutes before it plunged after some prey and I didn’t
see it come up again.
I saw no evidence of breeding although did see a female Hen
Harrier in the same area as one of the birds. There was however nothing in
behaviour to suggest breeding and at this time of the summer there should be
large young in the nest or newly fledged that require food. One male had
started its moult but hadn’t come very far whereas the other male had come a
long way in its moult which is also suggestive of a non-breeding bird.
That at least three male Pallid Harriers should have spent
the summer in the same area is amazing but it is perhaps even more amazing that
no adult female turned up such that
there was breeding although there is a single sighting of a 2cy female in the
same area.
Enjoy the video and pictures.
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Male Pallid Harrier (steppehauk). Bird 1 which I first saw on Thursday evening. Thi bird is clearly missing primaries and the black wedge is very obvious |
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Bird 2 has a fuller hand although is clearly moulting with only one fully grown black primary |
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Bird 2 which perched at fairly close range on a couple of occasion |
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Bird 2 |
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Bird 1 perched - I did have it perched at close range on Thursday evening but failed to get any pics |
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Bird 1 doing an impression of a petrel. The new and old covert feathers are easy to see |
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Bird 1 - here it looks like it was gulping up a pellet whilst flying |
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Habitat shot of Bird 2 perched with a Kestrel on the wire behind. The harrier was not much larger than the Kestrel |
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another habitat shot of Bird 2. There have been other pictures of presumably the same individual perhed on these poles |
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