We are now heading to the time of the year when I spend as much time looking down as I do looking up. The days are getting hotter and sunnier, migration is winding down and butter and dragonflies are emerging.
After a surprise Cuckoo in Maridalen – a silent bird
that just appeared in a bush in front of me for 10 seconds – I am only missing
Common Rosefinch from the common migrants. It does feel strange to have not heard
a Cuckoo yet but next weekend I am travelling with Conor to Valdres again and
there we should hear many although there is still so much snow in the mountains
it will be interesting to see how far spring has come.
A pair of Common Scoter resting on Maridalsvannet on
Thursday were a typical late migrant but otherwise there has hardly been a bird
to see on the water. The Lapwing situation is confusing. On Thursday there were
just two females sitting but on Friday morning I got a message from Halvard
that there was female with three young. When I got there later in the morning I
could just see 2 females sitting on nests but then in the afternoon I had the
female with 3 young and a bird on a nest so I am unsure if there is a brood
plus 2 nests or 1 brood and 1 nest – time will tell. Whilst I was watching in
the afternoon I saw the sitting female fly off the nest to go and feed. She had
to fly to another field as the nesting field is extremely dry with presumably
little food. When she flew off, her mate who had been standing about 50m away
then flew up and flew over and around the nest as though he was protecting it.
3 Lapwing (vipe) young with mum |
the still sitting bird |
Common Scoter (svartand) pair |
my first Cuckoo(gjøk) of the year |
a healthy looking but thin Fox. With it not being a rodent year then foxes will struggle to find food for their young and birds will make up a higher proportion of their catch |
a return visit to Østensjøvannet allowed a distant picture of the Pochard (taffeland) |
The Wryneck (vendehals) pair is still active in Maridalen and I do not know if they have started nesting |
the other bird (probably female) in the pair |
a shameful and unsuccessful trip to Østensjøvannet to year tick a piece of plastic did see a Coot (sothøne) danceoff |
Red-backed Shrike (tornskate) in Maridalen eating a beetle |
And some butterflies
a female Orange-tip (aurorasommerfugl) |
my first fritillary of the year, a Pearl Bordered (rødflekketperlemorvinge) |
and a Dingy Skipper (tiriltunge smyger) in Maridalen. Now that I have got used to how small these skippers are and how early they fly I am finding more and more of them |
I also took pictures of day flying moths but will resist showing them
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