This last week has been the autumn school half term holiday and we spent some of it in Beitostølen. It was nice crisp autumnal weather but on Thursday the forecast changed and we decided to leave a day early which turned out to be a very wise decision as we could see from webcam pictures that winter came in force on Friday morning.
Bird wise it was predictably quiet but there were
still hundreds of thrushes feeding on berries and Siberian Jays were as usual
cooperative.
Back in Oslo Bearded Tits have arrived at Fornebu and
will hopefully stay the winter again. I have had a couple of trips with the
thermal imager but so far have only encountered Woodcock.
view on Wednesday |
Thursday |
Siberian Jay (lavskrike) |
they look great when they glide from one tree to another but my attempts of capturing this digitially are still a work in progress project |
Willow Tit (granmeis) |
4 of 6 Scaup (bergand) on a mountain lake |
spot them? |
we came across quite a few domesticated Reindeer. This one is shedding the velvet from its antlers |
2 males |
this is not yet a year old but already has its first antlers |
male Bearded Tit (skjeggmeis) at Fornebu |
5 birds in this photo of a minimum of 11 I saw |
on the fjord this young Common Tern (makrellterne) was a late bird |
and this Purple Sandpiper (fjæreplytt) early |
quite a few auks have turned up with a number dying including this Guillemot (lomvi) |
and this Razorbill (alke) |
there are fish in the fjord though although this Red-breasted Merganser had eyes too big for its bill |
a mushroom picking trip in the forest with Mrs OB and The Beast was brightened up with this male Three-toed Woodpecker |
drumming |
Just wondering what the berry crop is like this year in terms of whether UK has any chance of waxwings or not? We reckon we're due a waxwing winter, but you'll have a better idea of that than we will.
ReplyDeleteHi Derek, the berry crop is huge this year and seemingly over the whole of Norway so they may not need to cross the North Sea
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