Tuesday 28 September 2021

Jack not allowed out to play

After my sighting of the Jack Snipe at Fornebu on Sunday afternoon I returned on Monday hoping to repeat the experience and hopefully record it digitally better than had the day before. I made sure all batteries, including the spare, were fully charged and had high hopes. Scanning the edge of the reedbed on a rising tide revealed initially only a single Common Snipe but soon I could see there were other birds further in. They took a long time to reveal themselves properly but in the end there were 6 Common Snipe although in the initial glimpses deep within the reeds I had (very) tentatively identified Jack Snipe, Spotted Crake and Water Rail….

Even if Jack was not allowed out to play there was a very good selection of other waders with 3 Black-tailed Godwits, 2 Grey Plover and 2 Greenshank showing well. A male Goshawk flew casually over at one point with a few Crows loudly following it. After having passed over the waders (which surprisingly) hadn’t flown off it then suddenly flipped over and dived down. A Greenshank narrowly avoided its talons and all the waders took flight whilst the hawk flew into some trees to consider its next move.


Black-tailed Godwit (svarthalespove) - all three birds are juveniles of the icelandic subspecies



hiding a Greenshank (gluttsnipe)




juvenile Grey Plover (tundralo)


a juvenile Common Gull (fiskemåke) that momentarily thought a toothbrush might be food

Common Snipe (enkeltbekkasin)

the Goshawk (hønsehauk) - a male due to relatively small size - flying slowly over and looking down

here it suddenly flips over and dives

a Greenshank avoided its talons

as did the Blackwits

the mixture of brown feathers shows the bird to be moulting out of juvenile plumage and is a 2cy


on the fjord there were hundreds of gulls and Cormorants in a feeding frenzy. There were clearly lots of small fish and I thought maybe I would see something larger that was driving them to the surface but I didn't. Neither did I see any rarer gulls, terns or skuas in the flock

Greenshank



juvenile Grey Plovers can look a lot like Golden Plovers (heilo) but the black armpits are diagnostic if seen

zooming out

rarest bird of the day was this Coot (sothøne) which was my first ever Fornebu record

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