WARNING - THIS POST IS LOOOOOONG!
I never got round to properly blogging about last
weekend in the mountains before I headed up there again to guide Jack so this
post Is a combination of the two.
The long weekend was in good weather – mostly sunny
with little wind and I had a fantastic visit to the Great Snipe on the first
night. The last two years have taught me that in late May and early June the
males are active early on and can even be observed in the sun so I was on site
already at 20.30. I heard birds displaying just away from the lek as I walked up
and the sun was still shining strongly. It took a while before birds displayed
on the lek but they were not visible and initially it was many minutes between
every round of “song” but at 21.35 I spied a close bird and the sun was still
golden! It wasn’t very active and mostly just stood there but just as it
started to display with a bit more frequency (other unseen birds were really
warming up) the sun went behind a large cloud and I could see that it would not
come out again before the sun disappeared before good behind a rather
inconveniently placed mountain. As I was knackered I decided to call it a day
and left the lek at 22.15 which is before the action really starts for proper.
A couple of short visits to Valdresflya really paid
off and Dotterel, Temminck’s Stint, Shore Lark, Snow Bunting, Bluethroat and
best of all 3 Long-tailed Skuas that showed really well. The only raptor or owl
I saw was a single Kestrel and it was clearly not a rodent year and the skuas
will therefore not breed but they were hanging around with Common Gulls finding
food on the ground.
My trip with Jack was some of the most intense
birding I have done. I picked Jack up at 20:45 on Wednesday evening and
returned to Oslo at 21:00 on Thursday without a second’s sleep and just-non
stop birding. We covered 700km (so cannot claim to have been environmentally
friendly) and apart from a few stops to eat and keep our energy up it was just
bird, bird, bird. We visited my usual sites and scored the same species I had
seen just a few days previously with the exception of the skuas (due to the
lack of Lemmings them may well have moved off completely) and additional birds
we added were many – Golden Eagle, Red-necked Phalarope, Siberian Jay,
Long-tailed Duck, Velvet & Common Scoter, Arctic Tern, Lapland Bunting,
Merlin, Willow and Black Grouse plus 3 very unexpected species (given where we
were) Taiga Bean Goose, Red-backed Shrike and Icterine Warbler. It was a fantastic
24 hours with perfect weather and Jack notched up 9 lifers which we added as 5
before 9am and then 9 before 5pm (sounded cooler at the time 😉 ).
We arrived at the Great Snipe lek at 00:30 and there
was intense action. There were 5 males (and possibly a female) and they hardly
stopped until 03:00 when a couple of birds flew off the lek and then we just
heard infrequent song until we left a bit later. It was light enough for us to
see what was going on and the males would jump around, chase each other move around
the lek but there was a clear centre which they gravitated towards. Whilst enjoying
this we had roding Woodcock, drumming Common Snipe, singing Cuckoo, calling
Willow and Black Grouse and singing Robins, Redwings, Song Thrush and
Blackbirds that did not stop singing although there was a noticeable increase
in the chorus after about 2 am and the first Willow Warbler sang around 02:50.
Waders were around in reasonable numbers but ducks
were very scarce. The lakes on Valdresflya were still 95% frozen which explains
why there were so few there but the nearby large and lower lakes had very few
ducks waiting to go up to their nesting sites. Bluethroats were also very
scarce and were present at under half the levels I have found in previous
years.
I also took a lot of video but will save that for a
new post as I have yet to go through all the files There are a lot of photos
though! 😊
Red-necked Phalarope (svømmesnipe). We saw 4 birds together and all looked to be FEmales
Lapland Bunting (lappspurv) - we had quite a few singing males but all in a very small area and no females. This species is becoming rare and localised in southern Norway
Long-tailed Skua (fjelljo)
|
three birds |
Dotterel (boltit) - females were still displaying
|
same bird photoshopped |
Great Snipe (dobbeltbekkasin)
|
picture taken at 21:39 |
|
21:49 after the cloud came |
|
01:59 by torch light |
|
02:33 at 1/50 second |
Snow Bunting (snøspurv) - I don't see them every year but they were especially numerous this year although I only saw singing males
Temminck's Stints - perhaps the birds that stopped off at Maridalsvannet in May
Rarest bird of the trip a Taiga Bean Goose (taigasædgås)
Awesome Simon! Aren’t the Red-necked phals females?
ReplyDeleteYou are of course right they are females but I had a bit of brain fog when I wrote the post. Thanks for letting me know and it is now corrected.
DeleteBeautiful birds and stunning photos. Thanks for sharing and keep shooting.
ReplyDelete