Day 3 of Værøy 2019 has
been a disappointment of depressing proportions. The weather was good for being
out for a walk (no rain and warm) but there were just incredibly few birds to
see. Early morning in the north gave three new Yellow-browed Warblers so we
thought there might a small movement but these were probably the only new
arrivals and most other birds had moved on.
The Red-throated Pipit
was still on the beach in the morning with other pipits and Twite but by the
evening there was absolutely nothing left on the beach except for a single Rock
Pipit.
Excitement came from following
up a very strange sound which turned out to be two Otters playing, watching a
hungry Kestrel chasing a Meadow Pipit in the air for a couple of minutes before
giving up, a hybrid House x Tree Sparrow and thinking I had kicked up an acro
from weeds behind the beach and getting all excited to only realise it was a
Garden Warbler.
I also saw a dragonfly of one the larger species which I didn't see well enough to identify but this is the only observation EVER that I can find of dragonfly for Værøy.
Here are pictures from yesterday and today of not so rare birds:
|
a very grey Chiffchaff (gransanger) |
|
Dunlin (myrsnipe) |
|
there have been large numbers of Parrot Crossbills (furukorsnebb) on Værøy in September but no Two-barred Crossbills (båndkorsnebb) which have been on the move elsewhere in Norway |
|
Twite (bergirisk) |
|
lookng east towards the mainland where there is already a lot of snow |
|
Rough-legged Buzzard (fjellvåk) - surprisingly only the 3rd Værøy record |
|
hybrid House x Tree Sparrow (gråspurv x pilfink) |
|
Otters |
|
a Redpoll (gråsisik) of unknown origin |
|
A Kestrel (tårnfalk) hunting a Meadow Pipit which was a first for me |
A bad days birding is better than a good day in the office!!
ReplyDeleteENJOY
It's not always about megaticks.