Today was pretty wet and grey but with no wind. Maridalen
had good numbers of thrushes and finches flying around but nothing to set the
pulse racing.
I thought that Bygdøy might have something. I’ve always
fancied the reedbed and wasteground at Hensenga for Stonechat or something rarer
but it was pretty birdless today. The Oslo fjord was also very birdless but a
Chiffchaff with a sweeo call got me a bit excited and needed to be seen to
ensure that it wasn’t something else. I had intended that my birding would be
restricted to these two sites but with so little to see time had flown and I then
decided to defy the new ridiculously high road tolls that have been put up around
Oslo (notionally in the name of the environment but really just a very
regressive tax from a left wing council) and drive out to Fornebu.
I had been thinking yesterday that maybe there was a chance
of Bearded Tits as I have seen other reports from further south that suggested
the autumn movement of this species had begun but thought it was a bit too early
in the autumn and had my mind more on Kingfisher or Jack Snipe. As I endeavoured
to find these species I heard a “ping” from the reedbed. Beardies! There was in
fact lots of pinging and a flock of at least 11 birds exploded out of the
reedbed and partook in the high flying they are famous for before plunging back
into the reeds where I managed some god views in the rain. These birds were in
the small reedbed at Storøykilen which often seems to attract the first
arriving birds before they relocate to the larger reedbed at Koksa where some
attempt to overwinter most years. I thought about also checking out Koksa to
see if there were any more birds but the rain put me off although I see that
another observer had 4 in Koksa so there may have been at least 15 birds
present at Fornebu although they could of course have moved around. Tomorrow is
forecast to be sunny with little wind so should give a good opportunity to
discover how many there are unless they use the nice weather as a chance to
move on (they seem to have an untameable urge to move around).
There were many Blue Tits also in the reedbed which I think
are probably migrants and also two Chiffchaffs. I also heard a Water Rail and
put up a Jack Snipe and had a very unexpected Dipper so there was a nice birdy feeling.
I checked out Sørkedalen for the first time in ages. There
have been a couple of reports of large numbers of geese using Bogstadvannet but
it seems there is no one regularly visiting the valley anymore so there is
probably lots going unnoticed. There were still a lot of geese today with 320
Greylag and 260 Barnacles but I couldn’t find anything more exciting other that
four Greylag x Canada hybrids with their parents.
|
male Bearded Tit (skjeggmeis) |
|
female |
|
pair |
|
three females and a male |
|
2 males & 2 females |
|
a female with a Blue Tit (blåmeis) |
|
an underexposed flock of part of the flock when it went high flying |
|
3 (of 4) Canada x Greylag hybrids |
|
all four can be seen here with dad on the right. Mum (the Greylag) had her head down |
|
this picture of female Goosander (laksand) and Red-breasted Merganser (siland) from Maridalen yesterday was supposed to be very educational except for the fact that the birds were always swimming away from me and the Goosander always had its head underwater |
I had a jack snipe today flying high over the botanical gardens going SE.
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