This weekends guiding had me praying to the Bird Gods and wondering what I had done to displease them before eventually being giving their slightly limited blessing.
Martyn, Jo and Stella had come to Oslo to see our special winter birds and especially Hawk Owl and I was determined they would leave happy.
On Saturday the target was the specialities of Maridalen and surrounding forests and on Sunday it was the taiga areas of Hedmark.
Saturday was sunny, windless and cold with temperatures down to -20C in the forest and on Sunday it was forecast to be same but ended up being cloudy with occasional snow and temperatures down to -23C. We experienced near white out conditions a couple of times when we were in low cloud and whilst cool to experience it was not the best conditions for finding birds.
On Saturday the targets were Hazel Grouse, Pygmy Owl and
interesting woodpeckers. Haze Grouse took an hour and a half and just as we
were about to head back to the car empty handed I had one last attempt and
finally a bird sang. It then took another 15 minutes to find the bird but it
then sat directly above us in a tree and was so unaffected by our presence that
it never even looked down at us.
Otherwise, the forest was very quiet with no peckers of any
type.
Maridalen gave us Crested and Willow Tits, Goshawk, Dipper
and Hawfinch and eventually Pygmy Owl which showed very well but far too
briefly.
So, the two main targets were delivered but peckers
disappointed.
Sunday we had a two hour drive to the taiga and I kept
hoping the forecast sun would appear the further north we drove but instead we
just saw lower and lower cloud. The forests were covered in thick snow but
where were the birds?!? We slowly drove the forest roads for over 4 hours and
saw only 11 species and only around 40 individual birds of which Bullfinches
made up half of these….
For a long time a female Capercaille was the top bird before
a Three-toed ‘pecker gave itself up but far too briefly and partly made up for
the lack of peckers the day before but we still failed to see a Black. But
where the taiga species? Hawk Owl (which was the #1 priority for the whole
weekend, Pine Grosbeak and Sibe Jay?
People were dozing off in the car but I was still searching
for a lump on a tree top and FINALLY a Hawk Owl gave itself up. Only 30 metres
from the road it showed just long enough for me to set up the scope so its
yellow eyes could be studied before stooping down and never reappearing. That
was the last bird we saw in the forest and a fitting end to the trip but I
would have liked to be able to find Grosbeak and Sibe Jay. It wasn’t through
lack of trying and f the sun had been shining then I think we would have had
more birds perching on tree tops but we play with the cards we are dealt with.
Pictures were not my priority but here is a flavour of the
weekend.








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