The sightings and occasional thoughts of an English birder in Oslo
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Friday, 25 October 2024
Piney has arrived
I have now lived in Norway for 23 and a half years. It took
me 10 years to see my first Pine Grosbeak and that was on the breeding grounds
in Pasvik, Finnmark but I followed that up with my first Oslo bird the next
year on 29 Oct 2012 with my first Oslo bird. That winter there were lots in
Maridalen although as it was not a berry year they were always feeding in the
top of the highest spruce trees.
Late autumn in 2016 there were a few birds in Oslo and then
autumn 2019 there was a proper invasion which was surprisingly followed up only
two years later by another invasion. Piney has long vied with Hawkey as my
favourite bird but I realise now that maybe I have seen enough of them…
Finding them is cool but twitching them as I did today has
lost most of its charm.
I had been suitably motivated by finding the first birds of
the autumn on Wednesday that I went on a long walk in the forest yesterday. I
was sure I would find many flocks of Grosbeaks as well as plenty of owls (ever
the optimist..) but had only a single Black Grouse for my efforts. Today though
Grosbeaks were being seen everywhere around Oslo and I joined others at the restaurant
at Grefsenkollen where a small flock was splitting its time equally between
eating rowan seeds and then flying into spruce trees and eating buds. Maybe
they see that there are so many rowan berries and realise that they have food
sorted for the next 6 months and think it might start to get boring so want to
spice up their diet a bit.
It was nice to see them though 😊
and especially adult males.
In Maridalen I failed to find any Grozzas but a flock of 35
Waxwings were nice. They were initially ignoring the rowan berries and eating
aphids and flycatching but in the afternoon were wolfing down the red berries.
A flock of 9 Common Scoter sleeping on the lake were my first of the autumn and
raises my hopes of a Long-tailed Duck dropping in.
adult male Pine Grosbeak (konglebit) in a sea of rowan berries
an adult female or a 1cy bird
look at all the liquid oozing out of the berry
they also fed on spruce buds
Waxwings (sidensvans)
spot the Common Scoters (svartand)
a beast of a Goshawk (hønsehauk) that looked like it could eat me
I am by NO means a plane spotter but I was intrigued when I saw these 4 vapour trails. A check of Flightradar24 showed apparently no planes in the area so they had to be military
the Norwegian airforce only flies F35 and F16 so as they are clearly not the former I guess they are F16s unless they are from a foreign military. They were flying NNE at a great height and I heard nothing from them
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