Yesterday saw a welcome day back in the guiding saddle
and I had a successful and thoroughly enjoyable day showing some of my
favourite birds to Christine and Maria. Temperatures ranged between -16C and -8C so it was a cold but quite beautiful day.
Maridalen gave us both Hawk and Pygmy Owl although both
were at annoyingly long range and very tiring trudges through knee deep snow to
try to get closer just resulted in looking at tree tops from new angles and not
finding the birds…
A young Goshawk provided an unexpected
identification challenge for me. When I originally glimpsed it gliding through
some trees I assumed it was a Hawk Owl. When we refound what I assumed to be
the same bird I identified it as a Buzzard based on rear views perched in a
tree. When it flew off I saw nothing to make me change my mind. When I reviewed
my pictures in the evening though I saw what it actually was…
We also enjoyed a 5 species of Tits although as is
typical for this winter Greenfinch was the only finch we saw.
Water Rail was
an exciting way to end an enjoyable day.
Hawk Owl (haukugle) at too long range
an attempt to get closer resulted eventually in losing sight of where it was
This Pygmy Owl (spurveugle) also evaded out attempts to get closer which involved crossing a train line..
Is it a Hawk Owl, is it a Buzzard, no it's a Goshawk
Water Rail (vannriske)
the view over Maridalen
and here is the moon from the afternoon of the 27th. Full moon was the 28th so this moon should be missing something although I am not sure where
Since my last post on Sunday daily temperatures have
fallen to -15C early in the mornings although they rise to a barmy -5C in the
afternoons. There have been no major changes in the bird scene although my
Pygmy Owl seems to have moved on to, as yet undiscovered, new pastures.
On Monday, my first downhill skiing trip of the winter
at Oslo’s Wyllerløypa was enlivened by 4 Pine Grosbeaks seen from the chair lift.
This is the second time I have seen them from the lift here and I have also
chalked up Hawk and Pygmy Owl in the past. Pine Grosbeaks have been more or
less absent from southern Norway this winter (following the mayor invasion last
winter) so it was a real surprise to see them. I was back at the slope on
Wednesday dropping off Jr Jr and a friend and I then went birding in Sørkedalen
which gave me a Great Grey Shrike and Hawk Owl. I have also seen three
different Hawkies in Maridalen this week aswell as the Great Grey Shrike so
both of Oslo’s valleys are delivering the good this winter although it is only
Maridalen that has overwintering Buzzards.
Today, in addition to some cool Water Rail action which
I will blog about at a later date, I had a close encounter with a Sparrowhawk
in the garden which took the Fieldfare that has been here for the last three
weeks – one less species to worry about in this weekends Garden Bird count 😉
Sparrowhawk (spurvehauk) astride a Fieldfare (gråtrost) in the garden. By my reckoning the hawk is an adult female. The thrush is deceased...
Oslo Hawk Owl #1 (Maridalen west)
Oslo Hawk Owl #2 (Maridalen north)
Oslo Hawk Owl #3 (Maridalen East)
Oslo Hawk Owl #4 (Sørkedalen north)
the Sørkedalen bird. The sun is shining off apartments about 7km away
a couple of Nutcrackers (nøttekråke) were annoyed with Hawk Owl #1 on Monday
Since my last post I have shaken things up a bit and
left the Dale on two, yes two, occasions! On Wednesday I walked along the
waterfront in Oslo with the main aim of seeing the Iceland Gull. After seven previous
unsuccessful attempts to see this bird I had decided I wouldn’t try again but
after it was seen two days in a row along the waterfront downtown I thought
that it had settled down. Maybe it has but I still couldn’t find it… There was
very little of interest otherwise although the young male Pintail (with very delayed
moult) was on the fjord with some Mallards and has now been seen at four widely
spread localities in the city in January.
On Thursday night most of Norway was hit by a big
storm and with the winds forecast to reach up to 25m/s and directly from the
south I headed out on Friday morning to my favoured sea gazing location of
Krokstrand. Well the wind was not even 10m/s and there weren’t even with tops to
the waves so unsurprisingly there were few birds. Lots of Common Gulls heading
south were perhaps birds displaced overnight by the storm, but the only
seabirds were a single Kittiwake, Red-throated Diver and three Guillemots.
I have of course visited the Dale as well and here
the birding has been hard at times. Temperatures rose mid week and there came
first lots of new wet snow and then rain and wind. This must create very
difficult conditions for the rodent eaters but the two Common Buzzards are both
to be seen as are a couple of Hawk Owls and the Great Grey Shrike. The Pygmy
Owl only gave up its presence by singing unseen in the distance one day.
Yesterday the weather turned again and we have
glorious blue skies. Mrs OB and I took the Beast for a walk and sat down in a
clearing to eat clementines and enjoy the view when suddenly a Hawk Owl
appeared in front of us! It was glorious light and the moon was even up in the
sky allowing me to take that clichéd shot of an owl in front of the moon
although admittedly they look better in silhouette at night.
1st winter male Pintail (stjertand) in very delayed moult
the localities where it has been seen in 2021
a Guillemot (lomvi) with a very dark face (for mid Jan). Such birds are often mistaken for Brunnich's Guillemot which is a real rarity in Southern Norway
the pale Common Buzzard (musvåk) that is still in Maridalen. This bird superficially resembles a Rough-legged Buzzard (fjellvåk)
same bird - note how white it is on the body
caught in an unusual position
the darker bird
Hawkie in the sun
I was waiting for the bird to fly when I noticed the sun in the background and changed my photo plans
Jays (nøtteskrike) often discover owls and give them grief although it is rare that I manage to capture it
This post heralds a break from the last few weeks
and (mostly) involves non-owl and non-Maridalen ornithological events 😊
Oslo is surrounded by spruce forest and one would
therefore expect that crossbills would be a relatively easy to find and constant
feature of these forests, however that is not the case. Spruce trees have a 4-7
year cycle between good seed years and this means that crossbills can often be completely
absent if there are no seeds to be found and that is exactly how it is now. Last
winter the forests were full of Crossbills (of all three species but
predominantly Common Crossbill) as the autumn of 2019 had seen a record cone
crop. But during 2020 the Crossbills vansished as the seeds fell from the
cones. So, although there are still loads of cones hanging on the trees they
are now too old and not of interest. As a result of this crossbills of all
three species are very nomadic and are always searching for areas where their
favourite coniferous tree has new, seed filled cones (each of the three crossbill
species specialises on different trees species). They can travel huge differences
in their search and at the moment their appear to be very few of any species in
Norway. In the summer one can often hear flocks of crossbills flying over at
great height as they search out the next suitable area.
My last record of a crossbill in Oslo’s forests was
at the beginning of November and I can see no other observations since late November.
I was therefore very surprised when I Sunday I found a flock of 7 Common
Crossbills in a cemetery (I was there searching for a Rook which is less than
annual in Oslo). The reason they were there is that there were a number of ornamental
non-native spruce trees lining the paths and these were heavy with new cones. Common
Crossbills can start breeding in January but I noted no song or other evidence
to suggest that they were in the breeding mood but if there is enough food here
then they may definitely give it a go.
Another interesting observation is wintering Water
Rail in Oslo. The species winters around the coast of Norway but there are very
few inland observations. This, of course, is because snow and ice means that
there are not many suitable fresh water locations for the species. In Oslo,
there is really one one suitable location for Water Rail which is
Østensjøvannet which has quite extensive reedbeds. There have been quite a few
records here in the summer months over the years and the species probably
breeds annually. In the winter though (Jan-Feb) the lake freezes over
completely and there are only records from 2015, 2019 and this year. I believe the
species has been overlooked in the past as the favoured stream (which strangely
enough refuses to freeze over) has probably not been visited in the winter before
although it now being checked more regularly. A visit yesterday in snowy
weather revealed two birds who seemed to be finding food amongst all the fallen
branches in the stream.
In Maridalen heavy snow seems to have caused the
Hawk Owls to change feeding grounds again but Pygmy Owl, Great Grey Shrike and one
of the Buzzards are still to be found.
2 male and a female Common Crossbill (grankorsnebb), part of a flock of 7 birds that have found a tree heavy in young, seed-filled cones
the cemetary also had some very tame Roe Deer (rådyr)
Water Rail (vannrikse) - playing around with levels in PSE is becoming fun
and here I have probably over done it...
they were constantly searching for food
and seemed to find enough
the pale Common Buzzard (musvåk) still in Maridalen
and the Pygmy Owl (spurveugle) singing from a distant tree top
Maridalen from an unusual angle. This picture was taken on Sunday before the snow came from the middle of a frozen Maridalsvannet looking north. The lake has attracted hundreds of people on ice skates but that is now over with a thick layer of snow covering the ice
and finally a couple of pictures of the Beast on a frozen Dausjøen on Saturday when it was glorious weather