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Wednesday, 5 June 2024

Valdres cabin weekend installment 1

A long, intense and very fun and successful weekend is now long over and I have a lot of memories to digest. Although we were there for 3 days nearly all the birding action occurred during the course of 18 hours on Saturday spent primarily around Valdresflye.

Absolute highlight was an adult Gyr Falcon which was my first in around 20 years of visiting the area! We also had multiple Golden Eagles and Rough-legged Buzzards, male Hen Harrier, Dotterel, Temminck’s Stint, Shore Lark, Siberian Jay, Slavonian Grebe, Lapland and Snow Buntings, Velvet and Common Scoter and Long-tailed Duck.

Spring had come early at slightly lower elevations where ice and snow had already melted and everything was already very green but up on Valdresflye (over 1300m) there was still quite a lot of snow and the lakes were frozen meaning birds were still easy to find. Early on Saturday morning with sun and no wind we had a great time with displaying waders and passerines – the number of species may be small but they are all wonderful. Then around 0845 we had a brief but fantastic raptor showing which included Rough-legged Buzzard mobbing Golden Eagle and Merlin mobbing Gyr Falcon! That we saw so many raptors was a surprise as it was clearly not a rodent year which was evidenced by just a handful of Kestrels and no owls or Long-tailed Skuas and few grouse.

Once again we failed to find Red-necked Phalaropes although that didn’t stop us stopping at countless marshes which I declared to be prefect for the species…

A worrying feature of the trip was how scarce Lapland Bunting seems to have become and we had only 2 singing and seemingly unpaired males plus a heard only fly over.

On the Saturday we went to “my” Great Snipe lek at 9pm expecting full activity in still good light as has been my experience early in the season previously. Instead, we had nothing and decided to leave at 10pm. This is my first blank visit since I discovered the lek in 2012 and was a real disappointment and also worrying in terms of why the birds were not there. It is possible that we left too early although I doubt that and the area around the lek looks no different to previous years although in the general Beitostølen area cabin building and “development” continues apace.

As we left the (former?) lek we were all tired and a bit despondent as this was not how we had intended to end a long day and as I drove us the 45 minutes back to the cabin I could only think of a cold drink and bed. As we approached the cabin though I felt a sudden increase in energy and suggested we check out the lek Conor and I discovered in 2021 but which had been empty when we visited last year. We stopped the car and bang! we could hear them from over 100m away. We walked closer and there was LOADS of activity. There were 6+ males, a few presumed females, fighting, courting and birds flying in circles around us that made us dizzy watching. It was now quite dark and we just enjoyed the experience rather than trying to get photos. Having filled our boots we drove back to the cabin with the windows open and less than 5 minutes from the cabin we found another lek right by the road and with a cabins within 100m on 3 sides!!! This also had a number of birds displaying and lots of noise.

 

I took way over 1000 images but thankfully(?) no video but it has still taken a long time to go through everything.

I will start with raptors. The images are pretty sketchy as the birds were always distant (even if they looked close in the telescope) but they were the best birds of the trip.

an adult Gyr Falcon (jaktfalk) flying towards us at around 1500moh - just as I've long dreamed of finding one

it would have been nice if it came a bit closer but it did look good in the scope

Rough-legged Buzzard (fjellvåk) - this is an adult male as shown by the barred tail

same bird

same bird

and same bird when in different light it looks browner

another bird - this one seemingly an adult female
the adult male hovering


the closest of the 3-4 Golden Eagles (kongeørn) we saw. This bird is actively moulting both flight and tail feathers. I won't even attempt to age it other that saying it is 3cy+ and not an adult

this distant bird was an adult and had a bird in its talons

yet another very distant shot here of a Rough-legged Buzzard mobbing a Golden Eagle. The size difference between the two was so much that I initially could not accept that the smaller bird was a RLB but it's plumage left no doubt

and a male Hen Harrier (myrhauk)

the view from the cabin. No ice on the lake and much greener than in previous years

still lots of snow on Valdresflye


looking over Vinstre lake which only had patches of ice. I have posted an equivalent picture from most of visits up here

looking south east over Vinstre at Bitihorn


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