The last three days I have been guiding brothers Richard and
Charles Tyler from GB and we have had some great birding and photography and I
was exhausted by the end of it. The purpose of their trip to Oslo was solely to
get good photos of “my” Hazel Grouse with anything else a bonus after the target
bird was bagged. So, no pressure then…
Giving it three days was a wise move as weather at this time
of the year can vary a lot and of course birds being birds then they may not
play ball. I feel I know my boy well enough that I can find him with enough
time but when the snow away from the ski tracks is thigh deep then one is very
restricted on where within his territory one can walk. On day 1 which had the
best weather (sunshine) of the trip but we called it quits after 4 hours and 11,000
steps walking back and forth along the ski track without being able to locate him.
Day 2 though was thankfully a completely different story with us locating him
less than 5 minutes after arriving and then watching him for two hours as he
rested in a spruce, preened and then clambered around in an alder tree eating
catkins. Relief and joy were palpable!
On day 1 after giving up on the grouse we had good views of
Pygmy Owl which we saw again on day 2.
We also had amazing views of Bearded Tit, Hawfinch, Dipper, Great Grey Shrike
and all 3 Redpoll species plus Waxwings and Nutcracker. Not everything I had
wished to show played ball though with woodpeckers being happier to call or fly
over rather than perch at close range and for inexplicable reasons Crested and
Willow Tits were only heard calling and didn’t visit feeders.
Bird of the 3 days for me though was a Rook which rather
amused Richard and Charles but this is a species I see less than annually in
Oslo and then on passage rather than as in this case hanging out with a gang of
urban Hooded Crows.
Here are some (ok, too many...) of my pictures but much, much
better ones will surely appear on Richard’s website soon.
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| male Hazel Grouse (jerpe) eyeing up an alder catkin |
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| after hearing the Hazel Grouse singing I used the thermal imager to find it perched in a spruce. This time it stood out like a sore thumb unlike in November when I cold hardly locate it in the imager when it was on the ground only metres from me |
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| and Pygmy Owl (spurveugle) |
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| my star bird - a Rook (kornkråke) |
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| it was even calling at times |
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| Charles and Richard |
Some shots and video footage taken with the phone:
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| photographing a roadside Pygmy Owl |
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| Bearded Tit reedbed |
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| and photographing them |
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| not seeing woodpeckers in the forest |
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| spot the Dipper? |
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| braving the snow for Hazel Grouse |