We have had the first good day of the year in Maridalen and I am looking forward to many more! On Tuesday I had only the second ever record of Rock Pipit and also a Lapland Bunting which is not seen annually and this was the earliest ever record in the Dale. There was not much else to be seen though and it was definitely a case of quantity over quality. The Rock Pipit flew up calling from a stubble field and I initially assumed it was an early Meadow Pipit but the sound was not quite right and I prayed it would land which thankfully it did allowing me to confirm it as a Rock Pipit. Rock Pipit are being encountered more regularly inland on spring migration but are usually on wetlands so a record in a stubble field is definitely unusual. On Monday I searched in vain for a Woodlark that had been seen the day before. This was a Maridalen first and a bird I have yet to see in Oslo so it was a crying shame that the news was not shared effectively. Woodlark is a species that is expanding in Norway and with lots of forestry work around Oslo and the creation of clearings that might suit the species then I had been expecting one to turn up (along with Nightjar).
It is still cold and very dry and this seems to be
putting a stop to migration although the first Song Thrushes and Great Crested Grebes have now turned up.
male Lapland Bunting (lappspurv) |
proof it was in the Dale |
Rock Pipit (skjærpiplerke) |
female Lesser Spotted Woodpecker (dvergspett) |
a pair of Wigeon (brunnakke) at Østensjøvannet |
this ringed Black-headed Gull (hettemåke) was seen in Yorskire in January |
and this one in Kew Gardens, London in October. Both birds (with sequential ring numbers) were ringed at Østensjøvannet on 10 April 2021 |
this is a much older bird and was ringed as a 2cy bird at Østensjøvannet on 12 June 2012 but in the following 10 years has never been reported away from Oslo |
Great Crested Grebes (toppdykker) waste no time |
Moorhen (sivhøne) |
adder (hoggorm) |
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