This morning’s Maridalen outing was sans The Beast
and avec Le Telescope. This did not result in any new birds though. In fact it
was again disappointingly quiet in the Dale and it was pretty much same same as
yesterday with Ring Ouzels and a Curlew the best birds although a male Wigeon
on the lake was new for the year.
A lunchtime return to the Dale with The Beast and Mrs.OB
resulted in a Kestrel (new for the year) and the sight of a pair of Canada
Geese displaying and then mating which was (surprisingly) very interesting to
watch and was going to be the subject of this blog post. That will have to wait
though as the Bird Gods shone and the day ended up very well.
Just as we drew up in the drive way from home a
message from Anders read that there was a second hand report that Elivs, aka
The King, aka King Eider was just offshore at Fornebu. The excess baggage was
quickly ejected from the car and I made haste to Fornebu. Pretty much exactly
10 minutes later I was walking down to the shoreline with scope and camera on
each shoulder. A fisherman beckoned me over and pointed to a close rock where
low and behold Elvis was in residence. It turned out that the fisherman was no
birder, had no bins, but had a childhoold friend (Terje Kolaas) who he had been
birding with years ago and who had instilled enough knowledge in him that he
had recognised the bird as a King Eider. He then rang Terje who put the news
out and just minutes later there I was! Ole (for that was his name) had told
his fishing buddy that birders would quickly turn up but I think I beat his
expectations! By the time I left 30 minutes later 8 other birders had turned up
but I had expected even more given it was such a good bird.
Anyway, back to the bird. IT WAS FANTASTIC!! An
adult male, summer plumaged King Eider at very close range. Initially sleeping
on a rock it then decided to swim towards us with a couple of Common Eiders
before eventually drifting further out on its own where it started diving for
food.
Here it was resting on an offshore rock islet |
male King Eider (praktærfugl) - birds don't get much better than this although older males of this species do get an ever bigger and more colourful bill knob |
with Bygdøy, Dynafyr and Oslo in the background |
quite cool marking on the chin and bill knob |
Hi. Got the link from Terje. You sure beat mye expectations showing up that quickly :-)
ReplyDeleteGreat pictures and I’m glad you and the other birders showed up and documented the find way better than I was able to with my old iPhone. I droppes you a message on Instagram. Just wondering if it will be Ok if i post the picture I took of the bird through your camera?
-Ole The Fisherman Andreas
@olefugle