The sightings and occasional thoughts of an English birder in Oslo
Saturday, 6 October 2018
Little birding
The half
term holiday continues, and we have remained around Oslo. Birding, even of the
incidental variety, has been minimal and my few outings have revealed little.
A short
early morning trip to check the sea off Bygdøy (the first snows have come in
the mountains which often is the push that seaducks and the last waders need to
move on) revealed a few birds with Red-throated Diver, Great Crested Grebe,
Razorbill and Guillemot on the sea and best of all a Rock Pipit on the rocks
offshore. This species is regular in the inner Oslo fjord but is rarely seen as
it is normally found on islands only accessible by boat so a bird on the “mainland”
is always nice to see. My pictures are not the best but do show how different
Rock Pipits can look depending on the light and show the risk in identifying the
very rare (in Norway) Water Pipit just based on a single (or poor) photos.
A walk
around Fornebu gave good views of Razorbills and Guillemots feeding close offshore
and with more time and the bazooka v.2 I could have taken some good photos of
the two species side by side.
Rock Pipit (skjærpiplerke). Looking very classic here - dark and olive grey
with the sun on it it looks paler and browner
and here it almost looks white under with very pale legs
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