The sightings and occasional thoughts of an English birder in Oslo
Wednesday, 12 June 2024
Going on a Blyth’s Hunt
We are now entering a period with lots of rain and
thunderstorms forecast which would normally get me excited but in mid-June in
Oslo I think there is little that is likely to turn up other than a Gull-billedTern…
I have kept up my nocturnal outings in an attempt to increase
#Oslo2024 and even visited Sørkedalen (as well as Maridalen) on Monday night
when conditions were perfect but think I soon need to admit defeat. Marsh
Warblers are the only birds I am finding although I did try quite hard to turn
one into a Blyth’s although cooler heads (or ears) brought me back down to
earth. I didn’t hesitate to follow up a report of one in Sørkedalen today
although as I feared (being the bad twitcher I am) I failed to find it even
though I got there only an hour later (and pictures leave no doubt as to it
having been present😊)
The
GND is still on Maridalsvannet and seems to be making short work of the
crayfish population. It is now possible to see three species of divers at the
same time. The diver went missing on Sunday before I refound it on Monday at
the southern end of the lake, around 3km from where it had been on Saturday. It
is one thing though for a diver to go awol – they do after all dive - but not
the Whooper Swan family which has just vanished. With such small cygnets they
surely cannot have gone far but I have checked all likely sites in vain.
I
have managed to find where the Hobbies are breeding though which is a new site
although I am not yet certain I have discovered which (Crows) nest they are
using.
it really poured down today although the Great Northern Diver (islom) didn't seem to mind
although Monday's nocturnal outing failed to produce any exciting "night singers" I did hear Little Ringed Plovers on a field in Sørkedalen, coincidentally the last field in the valley to hold breeding Lapwings although that is now a few years ago. I visited the next day to find the farmer working on the field and found no plovers but today I located a pair although suspect that their breeding attempt had failed to the tractor.
the male
the female
and the male again
Hobby (lerkefalk)
this 2cy male Common Rosefinch (rosenfink) is the only bird I know of in Maridalen this year although in Sørkedalen there are quite a few. In the video you can hear this bird singing
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