Maridalen deserved a visit today and it gave me a chance to
check up on some of the breeding birds. This season seems to have been a good
one for many birds. We have had a hot May and June with little rain and many
birds seem to have prospered due to this. Tits seem to have had a good breeding
season with many fledged young to hear and warblers and flycatchers are taking
food to young in the nest. This year also looks to be a good one for butterflies.
I didn’t have the courage to visit the mystery (for me at
least) acro warblers at Nes but instead got to grips with those at Kirkeby
where it looks like there is a breeding pair in vegetation along a stream and
an unpaired male who was singing for full in the middle of the morning and
moving around the area. When he came too close the breeding male then the breeding
male answered with a short burst of song.
The water level in the lake has risen after a couple of days
of heavy rain and the Lapwings no longer have any mud to feed on. The family of
four had now moved about 100 metres onto a newly sown field bordered by a field
of corn where they could hide if necessary. They only had the adult female
looking after them but all four are now so large that they are looking like
Lapwings and will hopefully fledge. With all the dangers they face this shows
what good parents they have. They have moved over 600 metres from the nest to
get to the water, having to cross a road, go round a farm and through lots of
dense and high vegetation. There are cats, foxes and Goshawks in the area plus
people, tractors and cars. I don’t know how it is going with any of the other
pairs but hopefully there were some other adults who were as good as these ones
such that even more youngsters will survive to fledging and help maintain the
population in the valley.
I had three singing Common Rosefinches including two red
males in the same area with one male chasing the other away suggesting that
there was a breeding pair with another unpaired male trying to get in on the
act.
The Goshawk nest now revealed itself to contain three
youngsters of which one is a lot larger than the other two and suggests that dad
has struggled to bring enough food and that the oldest youngster (who is
presumably also a larger female) has got more food than the other two.
The Black Woodpecker nest still has no youngsters hanging
out of the hole but nearby a couple of newly fledged Great Spotted Woodpeckers
were looking for food.
Apart from the Goshawks I didn’t have any raptors and have
still to see Honey Buzzard and Hobby in Oslo this year. I wonder if there will
suddenly be a number of records of both this species in August as there was
last year.
A short video of a singing Marsh Warbler (you get to see him will after about 40 seconds) plus a recently fledged Great-spotted Woodpecker with a very vivid scarlet crown.
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Two young Lapwings (vipe) - they now look more like their parents |
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mum with all four youngsters. One is sitting down in the middle of the picture and difficult to see |
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all four |
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the only parent who was with them. The smudgy facial markings show it to be the female |
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singing Marsh Warbler (myrsanger) |
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take off or possibly just waving to me |
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Goldfinches (stillits) are always nice to see |
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all three young Goshawks (hønsehauk). I have previously only noted 2 youngsters but today was very happy to see there are three. All are growing and losing their down but the lefthand bird is noticeably larger which suggests that dad may have struggled to bring enough food at times |
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juvenile Great Spotted Woodpecker (flaggspett) |
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lots of Ringlet butterflies (gullringvinge) today |
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