Friday, 13 March 2026

Finding my own, and many, signs of spring

Temperatures on the red side of zero if only by a small handful of degrees, no night time frosts and rain mean that spring is creeping along. There might still be lots of snow and ice but there are also now snow free areas even in Maridalen and a few birds are arriving. This morning’s dog walk revealed a singing Chaffinch which brought an uncontrolled smile to my face – maybe this world, and the bits that we humans don’t control is not so bad after all 😊

I have now seen two of the S’s in Maridalen with yesterday a number of Skylarks heading south (and a couple singing) after I think having met a wall of fog to the north and two Stock Doves doing the same. Mistle Thrushes, only the Dales’s third ever Rock Pipit, Merlin, Peregrine and migrating flocks of Whooper Swans have also suddenly announced the arrival of spring. As I write this there are strong southerly winds and more rain so I would not be surprised if a number of new birds arrive today. Maybe Maridalen will also get in on the Stonechat act? There is now a pair at Fornebu and with so many birds turning up surely we will find them breeding soon.


only Maridalen's third ever Rock Pipit (skjærpiplerke). Both other records were also in March and there is clearly a small overland passage of the species

it was on the exposed mud in the same field as the Whooper Swan (sangsvane) family were also finding food


Stonechat (svartstrupe) pair at Fornebu.



the male



and the female


the Whoopers

and an early Merlin (dvergfalk)


some sights and sounds from Maridalen yesterday:



Yesterday also saw me on a wild, and successful, goose chase. With no GPS trackers to help I can no longer use my phone to find the Taiga Beans but that didn’t matter as I tracked them down on two fields totalling 65 birds in total. I also had a number of early Pink-feet, two White-fronts and three Tundra Beans alongside Greylags, Canadas and hybrid between the two so it was actually a very goosy day.

The Taiga Beans were on stubble fields I have not found them on before although were in the same areas as previous years sightings and were also close to Whooper Swans and other geese whereas often they are alone. They were also relatively close to roads allowing themselves to be well watched and were surprisingly unskittish.

It was also noticeable that they were not together in a single flock. The first birds were 16 in total and were on a field close to where the birds regularly were in both spring and autumn last year and were spread out across a field with 140 Whooper Swans and Greylag, Canada and two White-fronts as you can see in this video.


After a while when they decided (for no apparent reason) to fly off and did so in groups of 4,4,5,2 and 1 with the last three groups eventually joining up and then turning around before flying back over the field and disappearing to the NE although these birds had returned later in the day and were again separate on the field as groups of 5,2 and 1. Amongst the group of 5 I saw bird V7 who has lost its neck collar but still has a colour leg ring.

V7 left leg probably with its family given how the group of 5 kept to themselves. This bird was ringed in Scotland in Nov 22 and I have seen it every spring since then but interestingly not in the autumns
Taiga Beans keeping separate and probably two family groups

another group of 4




The White-fronted Geese (tundragås). With such limited belly barring I wonder if they are 2nd winter birds





The second group of 49 birds was on a stubble field close to Udenes Church. The river here is where they roost but I have rarely seen birds on the fields here. A large flock of Whooper Swans has been here this week and maybe this attracts birds – it is very likely that I was watching very newly arrived birds. When I first saw them they were split into distinct flocks of 30 and 19 and there was in addition a small flock of Pink-feet which had a Tundra Bean amongst them. It was very interesting to see how these three small flocks were within 20m of each other but operated as distinct units. On a return visit 2 hours later though the geese were all mixed up. I was now able to find another leg ring Y7 but no collars.


a Taiga



more Taigas

and Y7 ringed on its right leg in Oct 2019 and seen by me every spring since and also in a couple of autumns

This video shows both the ringed birds:

So, 65 Taiga Beans in total with two leg rings but no collars. Hopefully there are more birds to come and the flocks will join up. It would make a lot of sense that the birds at Udenes were new in from Denmark that morning whereas the other 16 have been around a few days (I had 12 on 5.3 then 2 on 8.3 and 4 on 9.3 which may have been the flock of 16?).

 

The Tundra Bean Goose was educational to watch. When I found it amongst the Pink-feet it was clearly a Tundra due to being the same size as the Pink-feet and also the fact it was associating with them rather than the Taigas. On the return visit when all the geese were mixed together I did find it again BUT I doubt very much that I would have been brave or foolish enough to have called it as a Tundra if I had not seen it separately earlier. I have always been very conservative regarding reports of Tundras within flocks of Taigas and have dismissed other reports due to the individual variation amongst Taigas but of course it is possible for birds to get mixed up especially if Pink-feet (the more likely carrier species for Tundras) are mixed in. I had a pair of Tundras at another site amongst a large flock of Whoopers where there were also Pink-feet, Canadas and Greylags but no Taigas. The feature that was perhaps easiest to pick out the Tundra was that its head was paler than the heads of the Taigas which were noticeably darker than their necks. Whether this is a consistent (and previously described) feature is not something I am aware of.

These videos allows good comparison of the Tundra and Taigas:





Pink-footed Goose (kortnebbgås) and Tundra Bean - note how they are the same size

the Tundra with Taiga in the background


spot the Tundra?

these pictures could have been sharper but give an educational comparison of the two

this is probably the best with the smaller size of the Tundra apparant as well as the paler head. Bill structure is of little use but we see the shorter neck

and here with a Pink-foot

the bird on the right could very easily be mistaken for a Tundra due to short neck and stubby bill but note the darker head and I am sure it is "just" a female Taiga

and two Tundra on another field which I did not see side-by-side with other geese but look to be larger birds than the other one. Notice the pale head which is concolourous with the neck especially on the left hand



and Cranes (trane) are back although only no large flocks yet

Tuesday, 10 March 2026

Forced to twitch to get a feeling of spring

The progression of spring has not met my always high expectations. Lots of fog and temperatures only just over zero seem to be holding birds back with ice still on all water other than some streams and rivers, snow still covering most fields and the chance of a large spring flood seeming to be reduced.

Trips to the Glomma and Aurskog-Høland have revealed lots of Whooper Swans which are definitely on the move but there are not may other waterfowl moving yet. If the main flock of Taiga Beans have arrived then they are hiding themselves very well and I have only found four on two visits with one pair flying around calling and clearly not managing to find any kin. I have managed to twitch a Bewick’s Swan and a flock of White-fronted Geese but have not found my bird finding boots so far this year and a visit to a foggy Østensjøvannet today resulted in me twitching others finds in the terms of a male Stonechat and a nice adult Rook.

Maridalen is just white with ice, snow and fog and there is no evidence of spring migrants other than three Whooper Swans which are back. The bird I feel is most notably missing so far this spring is Mistle Thrush which was a very absentee on trips out east. I assume there is some cold weather further south that is holding them, and a number of other species, back.


Bewick's Swan (dvergsavne). This is the only bird to be seen in Norway so far this year and is a species that I think is a good candidate to become a national rarity not so much as it is difficult to identify but more because it has now become a genuinely rare species in the country. Many records now are, such as this one, of birds mixed up with spring flocks of Whooper Swans and turn up in similar areas each spring suggesting they are returning birds. This one is in the same area as a pair in 2023 and upto three birds last year. I should look at the bill markings to see if it is a bird from a previous year.

The bird was found on Friday amongst 300 Whoopers. I had been there on Thursday when there were only 130 Whoopers and despite it being top of mind did not see anything smaller amongst them.

Lapwings (vipe) have not come to Maridalen or fields by Glomma but there was a big concentration by Hellesjøvannet yesterday with 70 birds considered a very high count nowadays

a pair of Taiga Beans. There was another pair about 50m away but no big flock yet. I wonder if the 12 I had last week were part of the regular flock or perhaps from another population and were just passing through.

White-fronted Geese (tundragås) with Greylags and Canada Geese. The flapping bird has particularly impressive belly barring



there are 10 White-fronts in this shot

today's Rook (kornkråke) with a Hooded Crow (kråke) at Østensjøvannet. A number of records in the Oslo area in the last few days show that the very small spring passage of the species is occuring now






and a nice male Stonechat (svartstrupe) which was in exactly the same area as a bird 3 years ago



these large hairy caterpillars seem to be a very important part of the diet of the early returning Stonchats. That no other insect eating species seem to feed on them quite so much makes me wonder if they are a poisonous species and only Stonechats have developed the ability to eat them



Friday, 6 March 2026

Completing S Club 6 and owls with ears

This week has seen the final three members of S Cub 6 arriving for duty with Skylark seen on Tuesday and Snow Bunting and Shelduck on Wednesday. I am still to see, or hear, a single member of the band in Maridalen which is still covered in deep snow with no snow free areas yet. There is also lots of snow at Årnestangen and on most fields around the Glomma in Taiga Bean land but a trip to Sweden on Tuesday revealed very little snow from the town of Ski and eastwards. I had hoped that the drive to Sweden would reveal Red Kites but raptors were limited to just a handful of Common Buzzards and a stop at Gjølsjøen revealed my first Lapwings and a pair of Taiga Beans alongside many Skylarks.

A trip to Taiga Bean land yesterday revealed lots of snowy fields and ice on the river and nothing at all at any of the regular fields that I visited. However on a stretch of the river north of Årnes there was a flock of 12. They flew briefly on to a green field by the river where there were also some Greylags and I have noted previously when they arrive to very wintery conditions that they seek out fields with autumn sown green crops rather than trying their luck on stubble fields. With no working GPS collars I have no idea if the rest of the flock has arrived but expect they have not as it is still too wintery.

The two female Stonechats are continuing to hang around at Fornebu and I saw them capturing large hairy caterpillarsso life seems good for them. A number of new birds have also been found so I hope Maridalen will join the party next week.

 

Highlights of the week, and perhaps unsurprisingly for the time of the year, have been owls but not along Owl Road where visits by others has revealed no increase in singing Tengmalm’s and if anything fewer birds with just two birds seeming to be the expected result.

Eagle Owl is a species I have only seen or heard four times before. Twice in 2013 and again 2014 I visited a nest site in Hedmark and saw, heard and filmed singing birds just after sunset and was happy with these encounters. I am not sure as to the current status of this site but believe birds are still there but a couple of hours drive has for some reason put me off trying for them again. I do know of a closer site which is the only regular known site in Oslo and Akershus and visited in 2016. You cannot get close to the birds here and I only heard one singing distantly – enough for my Akershus list but not the type of experience that has had me particularly excited about repeating. Yesterday though I took Jack to listen for it and we didn’t just hear it but actually saw it!! And now I suddenly want more of them. It sang from when we arrived at sunset and despite searching and searching with the telescope it took another half an hour to see it sitting and singing atop a pine tree. Even though it was now getting quite dark I even managed a photo of sorts. But what a bird and I think they are very few others who have actually seen these birds. It was all at quite some range – over 1km – but very enjoyable. When we first heard the song we were very unsure as to whether it was an Eagle Owl as it sounded most like a Wood Pigeon and was not how I remember the song and indeed Merlin also detected it and identified it as a Wood Pigeon…. That ID was clearly wrong as for starters you wouldn’t hear a WP at such long range but I must admit finally seeing it was quite a relief. The bird had been clearly moving from song post to song post as we would hear it from slightly different places but having now a bit more knowledge of where it is I have hope that a future visit on a wind free, sunny evening could result in much better scope views.

Seeing it perched in the scope with its big ears sticking up you realise what a huge bird it is and in reality it should never be confusable with a Long-eared Owl but with grainy photos the two can sometimes be hard to separate. Two encounters with Long-eareds this week though have not had me wondering what they are. I have spotted them flying in the thermal at an expected site but there has been no singing. There are two explanations for this – either they have already formed a pair and laid eggs or they have not got into breeding modus yet. There was still lots of snow on the fields and I am very sure that they are not yet breeding. The overwintering birds that I followed in 2023 were present at their roost until the end of February without their being any song from them. I have previously found a young (non fledged) bird out of the nest in mid May which would mean egg laying at the end of March but this is very early and you normally encounter young out of the nest in June. I did have a singing bird on 6th March last year but there was far less snow then so conditions were different.

We have exciting times ahead of us!


Eagle Owl! (hubro) at over 1km range and 40 minutes after sunset. If this photo leaves you wondering what you are looking at then the head is to the right, the tail sticking up on the left and the wings are drooped.

And a couple of videos taken with the thermal of Long-eared Owls flying around. They fly on very elastic wings and seem to float at times but can also perform quick changes in direction and stoop down at each other. Wing clapping was heard but I am not sure it this can be seen in the videos.



the female Stonechat (svartstrupe) still at Storøykilen




Taiga Bean Geese on the Glomma

and a pair at Gjølsjen

all 12 on the Glomma