The sightings and occasional thoughts of an English birder in Oslo
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Wednesday, 25 April 2018
Swans and Rails
An overnight frost meant
that small pools had a layer of ice at 0830 this morning and it also helped slow
down the de-icing of the main lake which is still 99% frozen but the open areas
are growing rapidly. I can remember large parts of the lake still being frozen
on 1 May in previous years but suspect that this year will be a bit special.
Cold nights and little
cloud are not conducive for many new grounded migrants and Maridalen and Fornebu
had little new to offer today although a Lesser Whitethroat at Fornebu was a
year tick and a singing Blackcap was the first I have heard. Highlight here was
undoubtedly seeing a Water Rail “singing” in the freshly cleared reedbed. The
intensity of its singing suggests it is unpaired so far.
In Maridalen I was witness
to lots of interesting swan behaviour. First, I had a group of 4 young Whooper
Swans and two adults on one open area of water. The youngsters were together
but not with the adults. I thought that the birds might be the Maridalen breeding
pair and some of last years young but when I saw one of the youngsters aggressively
chasing the adults and the adults not fighting back I reappraised that view and
assumed that the adults were a visiting pair although the youngsters may well
be locally bred. A short time later at the other side of the lake I heard a lot
of Whooper Swan noise and then saw a pair of Whooper Swan attacking the pair of
Mute Swans that has been around for about a week. That a pair of Mute Swans has
hung around so long in spring suggests that they are thinking of establishing
themselves here (Mutes have not bred here before and the female in the pair at
least is clearly a 3cy bird and a first-time breeder). The local breeding pair
of Whoopers is clearly not happy to be sharing “their” area of open water and
really went at the Mutes. One of the Mutes fled on a couple of occasions
although returned to its mate that seemed to be receiving less abuse and even
called a bit. Later in the day I saw no swans at all on the main lake although
the breeding pair of Whoopers was back on their breeding pool.
I would normally be more than happy with a view and photo like this of a Water Rail (vannrikse)
but actually got to see it "singing"
and a close up. Note the blown up throat and the powerful thighs
they are exterely thin birds made for running through reedbeds
and jumping
This video of the Water Rail was taken handholding the bazooka so there is a lot of shake.... :
a swan standoff in Mairdalen
one of the Mute Swans had just been chased off and whilst the whoopers celebrated he (?) flew back to his mate
joining the mate although I am unsure which is which
Mute Swan (knoppsvane)
Whooper Swan (sangsvane)
Whoopers in attack mode. Both they and the Mute Swans nearly flew into over head wires
one of the Mutes with a colour ring that I unfortunately cannot read
this Common Buzzard (musvåk) was displaying (and "mewing") in Maridalen
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