The sightings and occasional thoughts of an English birder in Oslo
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Friday, 5 June 2020
Back in the lowlands
Back in Oslo where the sun is very hot which makes
takng my sunburnt body outside quite uncomfortable. The undoubted highlight on
Tueday was a Hobby hunting a Swift in Maridalen. The Swift chose to fly within
a couple of meters of me and the Hobby followed until it saw me and put on the
brakes just a couple of metres away and went vertical above my head. I had
hoped to see Hobby hunting dragonflies but I guess one Swift is of far more
value to the Hobby than a whole mornings worth of Dragons.
A pair of Goshawks were displaying in a new location
but I believe they are the pair that has not bred this year at their usual
location after having built a new nest which took too long to construct. Marsh
Warbler is now back in the Dale so all the expected breeding species have
returned and a male Red-backed Shrike looked to have a territory at one of the
sites where they bred last year (and has been hunting from posts used by a GG
Owl earlier in the year 😊
) and Wrynecks are also breeding. Icerine Warblers seem to be numerous this
year and I heard a number of birds singing as I drove around with the window
down but there do not seem to be many Wood Warblers this year.
Lapwing and Mute Swan are still on eggs but both
Whooper Swans and Teal have broods of 8 young. At the Three-toed Pecker nest
the male was taking his turn on the eggs and I was surprised to find a GS Pecker
nest with loudly calling youngsters only 50m away. The fact that these two
species tolerate each other shows how different their diets must be.
With the heat there are more butterflies and dragon
and damselflies on the wing although I feel that there are fewer butterflies
than last year.
Yesterday I had a successful trip to Nordre Øyeren.
With easterly winds and a rain front moving through I hoped for some rare vagrants
but had to content myself with local breeding birds with 2 Redshank and 3
Ringed Plover being the only spring migrants still moving through and a Green
Sandpiper may well have been an autumn migrant. Marsh Warblers were singing vigourosly
and as is often the case some birds need listening to for a long time to be satisfied
that they are not something rarer. A young male Common Rosefinch also sang as
did Icterine Warblers and Thrush Nightingale. A Honey Buzzard flew over
seemingly on migration (as were two in Maridalen later in the day) but the real
highlight was seeing two young Long-eared Owls just out of the nest.
Today in Maridalen Anders found a singing Reed
Warbler which I rushed up to listen to and this surprisingly is the first
record of the species in the Dale. This comes on top of the reported Sedge
Warbler earlier in May which will also be a new species if confirmed.
young Long-eared Owl (hornugle). As with other owl species the young leave the nest long before they can fly or look after themselves. At night they reveal their presence by loudly begging for food and by day try to hide as best they can
this individual is downier than the first bird and therefore a younger bird
Common Rosefinch (rosenfink). Despite its brown colours this bird sang and revealed it is a young (2cy) male
Green Woodpecker (grønnspett)
One of three seemingly migrating Honey Buzzards (vepsevåk) I saw yesterday. This one is a female due to darker secondaries and less well marked barring in the tail
Red-backed Shrike (tornskate) in Maridalen hunting from a post also used by Great Grey Owl earlier in the year
Three-toed Woodpecker males also incubate
a juvenile Common Redpoll (gråsisik) and the adult that was feeding it in Maridalen.
Marsh Warbler (myrsanger) is now back in good numbers
an unexpected Sand Martin (sandsvale) in Maridalen
Common Whitethroat (tornsanger)
breeding Wryneck (vendehals) - there seems to have been a second wave of arrivals around Oslo with these birds only just starting nesting now
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