The sightings and occasional thoughts of an English birder in Oslo
Friday, 16 January 2026
Mid Jan
After 3 very cold days but with only a small amount of snow
we then had a day with LOTS of snow on Tuesday and Wednesday whilst
temperatures rose to +/- zero. Thursday was cold again although at only -5C was
a relative joy to be out in but today, Friday, the forecast is for the
mercury to rise over zero and lots of RAIN. Welcome to icy pavements and roads
and hell on earth…
This week I have mostly been looking for snipes, rails and
owls and succeeding to a good extent. Jack Snipe, Water Rail and Pygmy Owl have
shown well, Common Snipe has been seen briefly but a Great Grey Owl in
Maridalen has only been heard about via via but if the record is genuine then both
myself and a number of others would appear to have been very close to it whilst
being oblivious to its presence. Hopefully it is genuine and is refound
although I so no evidence of rodents so cannot see that it will hang around one
particular area for long.
I have spent a lot of time trying to film Jack Snipe feeding
but that has proven very difficult and merits its own post.
A trip to Huk, Bygdøy revealed nothing unexpected except for
a female Pintail feeding in the rock pools which rather surprisingly is my
first record here. Three different female (but no male) Pintails have been seen
in Oslo this winter – one at Østensjøvannet and upto two at Bestumkilen/Vækerø.
In the last couple of weeks though only a single bird has been reported at
Vækerø so whether the Huk bird was one of the other two or another bird is
difficult to say.
Maridalen on Wednesday after all the snow but before the rain
the Pygmy Owl (spruveugle) has become more reliable again. Here it looks as though it is searching the ground for mice but otherwise it clearly had its eyes on birds at the feeding station
one of upto three Water Rails (vannrikse) wintering in Oslo
the open water that attracts Water Rails and snipe also often attracts Robins (rødstrupe) and Wrens
the min cruise ferry from Kiel arriving in Oslo on Thursday morning as seen from Huk. Purple Sandpipers were on the rocks and a few Velvet Scoter and Eider were diving for food. The female Pintail can be seen swimming left
the female Pintail (stjertand) feeding in the rock pools
one of six Purple Sandpipers (fjæreplytt)
the Pygmy Owl in Maridalen on Thursday. It is always easier to find it when it perches on top of a tree. Just after I took the picture it vanished but I then suddenly heard an explosion of noise from a flock of Long-tailed Tits that I had previously not been aware of so I assume it went for one of them
Long-tailed Tit (stjertmeis)
The sound of the small flock. They were still very excited a couple of minutes after they exploded into life
and my continued "hunt" for a video of one of these feeding will get its own post sometime soon
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