Today I was back in the guiding saddle and it felt
good. With Corona restrictions being lifted and Norway really not having
suffered (yet) it felt OK to be out again yesterday morning. I was guiding
David and Jaye, an American couple who are living in Oslo at the moment and who
are keen users of eBird which I have also recently become.
Our first target was Black Grouse which meant we had
as early a start as possible (05:30) so that we could hopefully catch them
lekking. We headed for the most accessible lek that I know of and as we approached
after a good uphill walk we heard at least one male displaying. I flushed a
female from the ground and we then approached the male. It was both bubbling and
croaking but flew out of a tree top (where we had not previously seen it) at
long range and showed briefly in flight. That was then it. We found no other
birds despite waiting in the area and did not even hear any distant birds. We
had succeeded in finding the species but I had hoped for much better views even
though it was very cool to hear the bird. Maybe the early and hot spring means that peak activity
has passed.
There is starting to be a bit of variety to the dawn
chorus in the forest. Song Thrushes and Chaffinches dominated but we also had
Willow Warblers and surprisingly also Tree Pipits with at least 5 birds heard
singing which were my first for the year.
Surprisingly, our long walk in the forest did not
reveal a single woodpecker but relocating to Woodpecker Wood gave us a pair of
Three-toed, nest building Great Spots and a flyover Black. In addition we saw
Green later. There were disappointingly few birds on the fields but we did see
Ring Ouzel and Mistle Thrush plus my first Oslo Wheatear of the year. In the deciduous
woodland Chiffchaff, Willow Warblers and the first Blackcaps were singing.
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female Three-toed Woodpecker (tretåspett) |
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this is not "one-toe" |
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pair |
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the male |
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my first Tree Pipit (trepiplerke) of the year. They were surprisingly widespread today with at least 5 singing birds but none heard migrating over |
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first Blackcap (munk) in Maridalen |
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still a few Ring Ouzels (ringtrost) on the fields despite them being very dry |
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