The sightings and occasional thoughts of an English birder in Oslo
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Tuesday, 7 June 2022
Grasshopper Warbler up close
Before I get onto the delights of the mountains (and
I still have rather a lot of images and video to go through) I also had a
couple of good days in the Dale at the end of last week including guiding Josh
as a birthday present.
The Grasshopper Warbler performed very well
including singing from both 4-5m up in a tree and also down in the grass.
I also checked out some of the more exciting
breeding birds. Red-throated Divers are present on last year’s breeding pool
but I saw no sign of an active nest and there were two pairs present which
seemed to cause problems. Two Goshawks nests that I visited had adult birds
present whose behaviour suggested small young were in the nest although it is
impossible to see them until they get larger.
I discovered a Bullfinch nest in a spruce tree by a
path and only just over 2m above the ground which was a real surprise. Great
Spotted Woodpeckers are feeding noisy young in their nests at the moment making
the nests easy to find but I have still to locate a Three-toed ‘pecker nest
although did find a female in the same area that they have been in this spring.
Three-toeds breed later than Great Spots so it may be a week or so before noisy
young help location of a nest.
Grasshopper Warbler (gresshoppesanger)
on the ground
4-5 m up a tree
Goshawk (hønsehauk) nest 1 with the female still on the nest but sitting high up as though young present
and nest 2 with the female off the nest
Great Spotted Woodpecker (flaggspett) nest
an array of insects being brought to the young
another nest
female Three-toed Woodpecker (tretåspett)
3 Red-throated Divers (smålom)
and a fourth flying over
female Whinchat (buskskvett)
male Bullfinch (dompap) with the nest and sitting female just under him
the nest jusr 2,5m above the ground in the lowest branches of a spruce
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