Monday 22 April 2019

Easter birding is best


Easter birding is my absolute favourite. I get to wake up really early and have 4 hours or so in Maridalen before coming home for breakfast. Even if there aren’t too many birds to see it is still magical being up so early in the morning. This Easter has offered fantastic weather with sun, no wind and temperatures not falling below zero at night and then warming up to around 20C in the day. I have been at Maridalen every morning from Friday to Monday and also had a very early trip to Svellet on Sunday morning. Beast walking later in the day has taken us to Fornebu, Bygdøy and Maridalen so I have been very happy.

Highlight was not avian but finally getting to watch adders fighting/dancing and mating. This will have to be covered in a later dedicated post as I have so much digital footage to go through. Avian highlights were few and far between as the high pressure just wasn’t conducive to bringing any birds down but Maridalen always provides and a male Lapland Bunting, summer plumaged Slavonian Grebe, Black-throated Divers back on the lake, finding a (the) pair of Three-toed Woodpeckers again, a migrating Hen Harrier and my first Sand Martin, Osprey and Tree Pipit of the year were noteworthy.

The ice began melting in earnest on Sunday 21st and disappeared during the course of Monday so went very quickly.

For other birders in the Oslo area the arrival of a Red-breasted Piece of Plastic at Fornebu created a lot of interest and given that Fornebu is now the clear hotspot for Red-breasted Geese in Norway (this is the third record this decade) and given that it ticked all the boxes for genuine wildness (tame bird, park surroundings and with feral Barnacle Geese) then it will undoubtedly be accepted as so….. Doesn’t quite spark my interest though.

Butterflies have been on the wing with Common Tortoiseshells, Comma, Orange Tip, Brimstone, Green-veined White noted. In the garden a wasp species was biting into buds on a pear tree and in Maridalen there were so many (Honey?) Bees on catkins that we could hear them buzzing.

I have far too many photos to go and might have to come back with an extra Easter posting once I've gone through them all but these are the ones that I've sorted so far.

the scene in Maridalen at 0740 on 22 April with the last bits of ice rapidly melting

Slavonina Grebe (horndykker). This species is more or less annual at the end of April ut usually only for a single day


Two and a half Tufted Ducks (toppand). The spring passage has just started

lots of Whooper Swan activity on 22.4 On the lake were an adult pair (not the breeding pair), an adult with two youngsters and three youngsters together (last years young?). The adult pair was also in the valley and had to later deal with the other pair which decided to visit the breeding site but who rapidly fled when the breeding pair came loudly aggressively towards them

Honey? Bee

Curlew (storspove) passage is peaking and a few have passed through Maridalen 
first Sand Martin (sandsvale) of the year



male Lapland Bunting (lappspurv)

wasp species

Black-throated Diver (storlom)






Blue Tit (blåmeis)

Blåveis

Catkins (or are they actually called something else?)

Comma (hvit C) butterfly showing where its name (in both English and Norwegian) comes from

high up migrating Hen Harrier (myrhauk)

male Linnet (tornirisk) at Fornebu

a hiding Moorhen (sivhøne) also at Fornebu


male Three-toed Woodpecker (tretåspett) in Maridalen. I have loads more pictures to go through and will have a separate post later

Wood Pigeons (ringdue) often seem to have a leaky pupil
Two very different male Adders (hoggorm) "dancing" to decide who is strongest. Lots more to come on these which is undoubtedly one of the most amazing things I have experienced

1 comment:

  1. Looking forward to birding with you at this location on May 30. Great photography.

    ReplyDelete