Yesterday, saw me on a friends and family guiding to the owls in Hedmark. It was very successful if, as always, tiring trip.
Two nesting Great Grey Owls included my back up nest which I
visited for the first time and the pair that I have now previously visited
which have acted in a very aggressive way without being on the nest. On
yesterday’s visit the female again announced her presence by bill snapping when
we were 50m away and could not see either her or the nest. She was perched
quite high in a tree and continued snapping noisily whilst we watched her. It
is quite uncomfortable being there when the bird seems so unhappy/angry so we
didn’t hang around but I kept looking over my shoulder as we left just in case
she flew at us but instead she flew onto the nesting platform and acted very
much as though she was on eggs! But this raises a number of questions:
1.
Why was she not on the nest initially? My experiences
with other nesting GGO over the years has always been that the females stay on
the nest no matter what.
2.
Why does she continue to be so aggressive in her
behaviour? At the other nest we visited the female made no noise and hardly
seemed to follow our movements
3.
Why is she so late in egg laying? The eggs (if
there actually are some) must surely have been laid since my visit with Jack on
5th May whereas I know that at the other nest the first egg was laid
on 22nd April which I think is in itself a fairly late date.
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| the particularly aggressive female GGO in a tree |
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| and then suddenly on the nest platform |
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| and the other GGO nest which is much more luxuriously furnished |
A check of the Tengmalm’s nest box resulted in no joy for my trunk scratching but I was able to attach the superzoom to the tripod and lift it up such that I could see through the hole and there were at least two large young in the box. A very thorough search of the area did not reveal any adults or other young that may already have jumped out although mum must have been very close by.
We checked just one of the Ural Owls nests. This was the
nest where the female flew out when I scratched on 8th April so with
an incubation period of about 4 weeks I was ready for the young to already be
large enough that mum was no longer in the box. This meant we need to be very
careful as to how we approached the area and we walked a large semi circle
around the nest box. The female gave away her presence by bill snapping and
when we finally saw her perched about 30m from the box she flew away from the
box as though trying to draw us away. Just a couple of steps by us towards the
box though brought her right back and then she kept a very close eye on us (although
we did not go any closer to the box for both our own safety and also her
comfort). One thing that was odd was that she seemed to be panting almost all
the time. It was only about +13C so was hardly hot and she wasn’t in direct
sunlight but she was pumping her throat with her bill open (but not making any
audible noises) for minutes on end. The young did not show themselves in the
nest opening so are hopefully not ready to leave for 1-2 weeks.
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A stop to listen for Ortolan resulted in no joy and although it may still be a bit too early it would hardly be a surprise if none returned this year. The last confirmed nesting was my record in 2023 and the last two years have only seen a couple of unpaired singing males, one of which is very likely to have been the male from the 2023 nesting. So, it would be no surprise if these birds are now dead and with no recruitment to this population extinction has been unavoidable.
Oslo birding since my last post has continued to be quite
uneventful with rain and southerly winds having no noticeable effect. The only
highlight was a thirty minute mid afternoon period in Maridalen on the 16th
just after it had stopped raining and when the sun came out. This caused a
Falsterbo lite experience with 3 Honey Buzzards, 4 Ospreys, 1 Common Buzzard, 1
Sparrowhawk and 4 Kestrels moving through. Wrynecks seem to be well established
though with no a mating paid and two unpaired males and after struggling with
Black Woodpecker I now have a nest that is still being excavated and another where
two young were being fed at the entrance. At the nest which is still being excavated
I saw no splinters being thrown out but could hear one of the adults (I’m quite
sure the female) knocking away inside the hole and also on two occasions
drumming inside the hole!
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| this Black Woodpecker nest must be at least 4 weeks ahead of the other one I found |






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