Today I visited both Sørkedalen and Maridalen and
finally found my first Red-backed Shrikes of the year with two pairs in the
same place in Sørkedalen and a pair in Maridalen meaning that after having
feared it was a catastrophical year for the species that it now seems to be quite
a normal one! I think that they are just very late arriving this year.
In Maridalen I also confirmed breeding on a new field with a single youngster and adult seen so it now looks like four pairs have hatched young.
River Warbler (elvesanger) taken with the superzoom using flash |
taken with the bazooka ISO 25600, 1/160 sec |
ISO 25600, 1/125 sec |
the bazooka using flash ISO 3200 1/60 sec |
male Red-backed Shrike (tornskate) |
a pair of shrikes - the female was wing shaking and I believe they mated |
same female |
this female was in Mairdalen and its appeareance is I believe because it had just bathed. I struggled at first to know what it was and was thinking sparrow |
same bird |
and her mate who wasn't showy |
Icterine Warbler (gulsanger) |
one of 6 singing Common Rosefinches (rosenfink) today |
surprisingly I had Yellow Wagtails (gulerle) at 4 locations today. I only got to study them at one place and here all 5 birds were females of the (expected) race thunbergi |
the variety in female Yellow Wagtails is bewildering |
this Four-spotted Chaser (firflekkbredlibelle) was in the garden on Sunday and was a real surprise given it was the first dragonfly I have seen this year (plus an unidentiifed damselfly) |
whilst walking on Sunday this Camberwell Beauty repeatedly landed on Jr Jr |
it appeared to be looking for salts |
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