The sightings and occasional thoughts of an English birder in Oslo
Saturday, 16 November 2024
Birds OTHER than Grosbeaks
I have been seeing a lot of Pine
Grosbeaks this week but will try to write a post that doesn’t include them, or
at least pictures of them, although that may be hard.
I have walked a lot in the forests and apart from the
Grozzas there is disappointingly little to see. The Grozzas are in fact the
second commonest species at the moment with only Fieldfare being more numerous.
I did find a Mistle Thrush though which looks to be the latest Oslo record ever
but perhaps not a surprise with all the berries and lack of snow.
a very late Mistle Thrush (duetrost)
Pygmy Owl continues to allude me (and seemingly everyone else)
and I am at a loss to understand where they might be. Hazel Grouse has also
been a very difficult bird for me to find this autumn but I did find a singing
male on one of my trips.
male Hazel Grouse (jerpe)
An all black corvid that flew up with Hooded Crows from
beside the road in Maridalen had me thinking maybe I was going to add a new
species to #Oslo2024 in the form of Carrion Crow but it turned out to be a Rook
- still a good bird though.
Carrion Crow (kråke) and 1st winter Rook (kornkråke)
Absolute highlight was a Hawk Owl again in Maridalen
although as it was 8 days after the last sighting it may well be a new bird.
This one was frequenting the edges of stubble fields and I saw it catch 2 voles
so may well have found hunting grounds good enough to hang around a bit.
A trip with the thermal on Thursday evening revealed Snipe
and Woodcock but also rodents at a couple of sites (for the first time this
autumn) which suggests that there may be an increase in their numbers which is
promising. Still a chance for a GGO?
Next week we are forecast to get some snow and also
temperatures below zero all day long which I hope will cause a bit of a shake
up in the bird scene.
Hawk Owl (haukugle) with I believe a Field Vole (markmus) with its entrails hanging out
and another one
This video has it calling which I don't remember hearing before other than on breeding grounds:
with the Linderudkollen ski jump in the back ground
here a Crow was flying over causing the owl to adopt a thinner posture
would have been a bit orgasmic if the rowan tree had Grozzas feeding in it!
nice with shadows
coming up from an unsuccesful stoop into the grass
and on its way dow
very feathery legs
claws
here it flew towards me after hearing something and landed less than 5 metres away and stared intently right down
coming up from another unsuccesful stoop
I managed to not post a Grosbeak photo!! Here are some Waxwings (sidensvans) instead. It is strange that this species is currently less numerous than the Grozzas
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