Birding has gotten very slow this last week. My “scarce and sensitive” species that I have been monitoring on an almost daily basis seems now to have moved on with my last sighting a week ago and a few nocturnal owling trips have been surprisingly quiet. I have had two trips into forests where all manner of owls should have been possible and conditions were fantastic with no wind, no cloud and no disturbing sounds from melt water. The only thing missing was a full moon which some say encourages owls to sing but for which I can see little evidence for. A single Tengmalm’s Owl was all that we turned up and even that gave only a few hoots and didn’t break into proper song. There are extremely few other reports of singing owls (even Tawnies) so it does look like we are going to have a very poor owl breeding year in 2023 in the south of Norway (in the far north it seems much better though).
Today saw an upturn with my earliest ever encounter
with the Scottish Taiga Beans. I received an email from Angus a couple of days
ago informing me that tagged birds had left Denmark and were on course for
Norway and a check of the maps yesterday evening showed them back on their
favoured staging grounds after they had roosted in Nordre Øyeren. We have just
had two days of snow so conditions were far from welcoming for them and you must
wonder why they chose to come so early. They have only turned up in February
once before and that was last year when they arrived on the 27th.
They have returned to Denmark before after finding there was too much ice and
snow and time will tell if they choose to do the same this year.
I decided to look for them today in glorious sunny
weather and found them first on the river and then on a field. The lie of the
land allowed me to get very close without disturbing them and I had some of my
best ever views. There were 87 Taiga Beans and 2 Pink-footed Geese. This is a
low total and I expect more to turn up.
7 ringed birds was a good result. The two with
functioning GPS senders (5 and 6) which were fitted on 5 Nov 2022 were present as
expected and I also had GPS tagged bird 27 whose sender last transmitted on 14
Jan in Scotland so it was good to confirm he is still alive.
There were 4 birds with neck collars: V8 and V7 also
received their rings in the trapping operation on 5 Nov 2022 but the other two
birds were old friends. X4 was ringed on 14 Oct 2012 (with a GPS collar 07) and
I saw it annually until 2017. It then must have lost its neck collar but I was
able to identify it on 28 August 2022 due to it having a black ring on its left
leg. Amazingly enough it was trapped again on 5 Nov 2022 and a new neck collar X4
was fitted. The last bird was 6U who is one of the original birds and was
ringed on 12 Oct 2011. I have seen him every spring since then (except 2022)
and most autumns.
Taiga Bean Geese in wintery conditions |
6U, X4 and either 5 or 6 with GPS collar and solar cell |
GPS collar 6 - I have to say this looks to be a rather large collar |
27 - a now non functioning GPS collar |
V8 |
V7 |
resting on the river |
snow on the bills |
even though they are in a stubble field they look to be eating green vegetation/roots |
2 very large, long necked looking birds, similar to the one I saw on Røst |
89 birds in total by my count |
Pink-footed Goose (kortnebbgås) |
both the Pink-feet are in this picture and their smaller size is very apparant |
The geese on the field, picture taken with mobile |
view down to the river which is ice free |