The tropical conditions
have not brought as many southern rares to Norway as one would hope for and in
fact there have been fewer rare birds so far this spring than one would normally
expect. Yesterday a couple of Spoonbills turned up south of Oslo and most
surprising of all a 1st summer Ross’s Gull (hardly a southern
bird..) turned up at the Great Big Dump so this gave me some hope.
The hot weather
though has caused a rapid decline in water levels at Årnestangen and I
interpreted the published water level this morning to mean that there would
once again be some mud at Årnestangen. Årnestangen and Nordre Øyeren generally
offer the best chance of something exciting around Oslo and although it would
have been best with a thunder storm I thought that it would be worth the long
walk out. From the car I could see that there was indeed a small sandbank
exposed so I set off on the 45-minute walk confident I would find marsh terns,
Black-winged Stilt, Red-footed Falcon, Spoonbill or something of that calibre as
reward for the long walk and the extreme numbers of mossies.
Well
I didn’t get quite that level of reward, but it was worth the trip. The
sandbank held a 1st summer Little Gull, 7 Ringed Plover, 1 Redshank,
1 Dunlin and a Broad-billed Sandpiper! There were quite a few male dabbling ducks
which were nearly all males but amongst 36 Teal were 3 females and this caused
loads of commotion with displaying and calling. Two male Garganey were also
calling a lot and showed very well. Both had started moulting and one was a
particularly poorly marked bird which I don’t think was just a result of moult.
Raptors
were again in very short supply with 3 Ospreys and a couple of Marsh Harriers
the only ones noted. Marsh Warblers were singing but I failed to find anything
scarcer other than a single Sedge Warbler.
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male Garganey (knekkand). This picture worked out very well!! |
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this is the uncropped photo of the bird as it buzzed the tower (one for the Top Gun aficionados) |
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and from below |
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the two male Garganey together. The bird in the bckground had a very poorly defined white crescent on the head |
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2 Marsh Harriers (sivhauk) |
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a pair of Lapwings gave grief to anything (me included) that walk past or flew over their field but I saw no young.Curlews and Snipe are also breeding in the area |
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a displaying Snipe (enkeltbekkasin) - note the two outer tail feathers which make the distinctive noise |
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a Small Heather (engringvinge) butterly |
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same butterfly |
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and my first Common Blue (tiriltungeblåvinge) of the year |
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