Showing posts with label Grey Plover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grey Plover. Show all posts

Friday, 24 May 2024

The year that keeps on giving

Yesterday was not just about Oslo year ticks I also had good and very surprising news on Oslo’s Lapwings. First a pair is attempting again but what shocked me was to see an adult with 4 small young. The young are too small to possibly have come from the failed/abandoned nests as they would have had to have fledged a week ago. So, this means they come from a nest I wasn’t aware of. There were three pairs at the beginning of the month but after that I only was aware of the two pairs whose nests I had found. Clearly though the third pair was nesting more secretively and good for them!

At Årnestangen of the three nesting pairs one is still on the nest, another seems to have failed (possibly due to the nest flooding) but were seen mating and the behaviour of the third pair suggested they had (unseen) young. Worryingly though there was a flock of 43 adults that were clearly failed/non breeders. I don’t know from how far they had come but this suggest a very bad breeding season locally.

 

Today’s trip to Gressholmen was rewarding if not surprising as Jack had got there before me and had been very productive. By the time I got on the ferry I knew I had three Oslo # waiting for me and sure enough just a couple of minutes after getting to the island I heard Thrush Nightingale #178, then saw Grey Plover #179 and a few seconds later a Dunlin #180. It was overcast and we even had a few spots of rain but the heavy rain or thunderstorms that we prayed for did not materialise but Monday is still looking to be a good day. Other than the aforementioned waders there were only 4 Ringed Plovers, 2 Common Sands and a few Oystercatchers but it always felt like something good could drop in although after 3 hours I decided that reality and feelings were not coalescing and home beckoned.

my eBird summary showing that I have now, as of 24 May, seen as many, or more species in Oslo than I have managed in a whole year since 2020 when I started using eBird


So, I need “just” 12 species to beat my record from 2019 and another 9 to hit the mythical 200. So, what is likely?

Honey Buzzard is as good as certain and Sand Martin and Bluethroat almost so and in recent years Water Rail and Jack Snipe have proved to be reliable in early winter. Capercaille is a species that breeds in Oslo’s forests so with an appropriate amount of walking and searching should also be a species I can find. Other than these though I am dependent on certain events happening.

Rain or thunderstorms that grounds waders and potentially terns and Little Gulls either in the next week or in July/August.

A good autumn wader passage regardless of rain.

A good arrival of night singers.

Autumn storms that bring in seabirds.

An influx of northern species in the late autumn such as owls or Grosbeaks, and a few real rarities and perhaps most importantly the ability to go twitch when necessary.

 

Currently I am slightly birding aide handicapped as my tripod head is busted so scope use is rather limited and I managed to lose my thermal imager and despite retracing my steps countless times it remains lost but I can’t see that slowing me down!


Grey Plover (tundralo) and Ringed Plovers (sandlo)

Grey Plover with Oystercatcher (tjeld)

and with Dunlin

singing Thrush Nightingale (nattergal)



Jack with everything staked out for me

the bay at low tide when a few spots of rain fell and I thought anything could happen

adult Lapwing (vipe) with a chick in Maridalen!

and then there were 4

they can only be a few days old

and the bird that is attempting to nest for the second time


a male giving a distraction display at Årnestangen

failed breeders



this is a good spring for Siskins (grønnsisik) and they can now feed on dandelion seeds

pair of Shoveler (skjeand) at Årnestangen

Tuesday, 28 September 2021

Jack not allowed out to play

After my sighting of the Jack Snipe at Fornebu on Sunday afternoon I returned on Monday hoping to repeat the experience and hopefully record it digitally better than had the day before. I made sure all batteries, including the spare, were fully charged and had high hopes. Scanning the edge of the reedbed on a rising tide revealed initially only a single Common Snipe but soon I could see there were other birds further in. They took a long time to reveal themselves properly but in the end there were 6 Common Snipe although in the initial glimpses deep within the reeds I had (very) tentatively identified Jack Snipe, Spotted Crake and Water Rail….

Even if Jack was not allowed out to play there was a very good selection of other waders with 3 Black-tailed Godwits, 2 Grey Plover and 2 Greenshank showing well. A male Goshawk flew casually over at one point with a few Crows loudly following it. After having passed over the waders (which surprisingly) hadn’t flown off it then suddenly flipped over and dived down. A Greenshank narrowly avoided its talons and all the waders took flight whilst the hawk flew into some trees to consider its next move.


Black-tailed Godwit (svarthalespove) - all three birds are juveniles of the icelandic subspecies



hiding a Greenshank (gluttsnipe)




juvenile Grey Plover (tundralo)


a juvenile Common Gull (fiskemåke) that momentarily thought a toothbrush might be food

Common Snipe (enkeltbekkasin)

the Goshawk (hønsehauk) - a male due to relatively small size - flying slowly over and looking down

here it suddenly flips over and dives

a Greenshank avoided its talons

as did the Blackwits

the mixture of brown feathers shows the bird to be moulting out of juvenile plumage and is a 2cy


on the fjord there were hundreds of gulls and Cormorants in a feeding frenzy. There were clearly lots of small fish and I thought maybe I would see something larger that was driving them to the surface but I didn't. Neither did I see any rarer gulls, terns or skuas in the flock

Greenshank



juvenile Grey Plovers can look a lot like Golden Plovers (heilo) but the black armpits are diagnostic if seen

zooming out

rarest bird of the day was this Coot (sothøne) which was my first ever Fornebu record

Sunday, 26 July 2020

Watching waders in the rain at Årnestangen

Before I have had the time, or inclination, to go through holiday pictures I had to get out birding this morning. With rain forecast there was no other place to be than Årnestangen and I was not disappointed. There were no rarities but good numbers of brick red arctic breeding waders is always enough to make me happy. Highlight were; 44 Bar-tailed Godwits, 47 Knot, 23 Grey Plover, 6 Sanderling and a Curlew Sandpiper. I had 17 waders species in total and my eBird checklists can be seen here:

There was some coming and going with flocks of both Barwits and Knot arriving whilst I was there and most of the Barwit also continued on their southbound migration. Conditions are looking very good out there but as usual a telescope was necessary and I do not look forward to the day a rare stint or small sandpiper is found there..

Knot (polarsnipe), Sanderling (sandløper), Grey Plover (tundralo) and Curlew Sandpiper (tundrasnipe)

Thursday, 29 August 2019

Playing away from home


With rain in the air yesterday I abandoned Maridalen and headed for Årnestangen with a hope of a wader bonanza. There was rain but no bonanza with a meager 12 Dunlin as the most numerous species. There was a bit of variety though with Temminck’s Stint, Grey Plover and Knot the scarcest waders. I had 5 Marsh Harriers (Hen and hopefully Pallid should also arrive soon) and an adult White-tailed Eagle and best of all the two Great White Egrets which have now been here for a month.

It rained really hard today but was far too much (and lots of lightening) to make the prospect of another trip to Årnestangen appealing. I instead popped into Maridalen where the Beast and I got soaking wet but did have a couple of Bluethroats and a Hobby as reward. The hide at Østensjøvannet seemed like a good idea – it might be useless as a hide but does keep you dry in the rain – although the hoardes of hirundines and terns and Little Gulls that I had hoped for were not present. I did however find a Slavonian Grebe (less than annual here) and a couple of Little Grebes which were first found a couple of days ago.


Both the Great White Egrets (egretthegre) 


an older (2cy+) female Marsh Harrier (sivhauk) that headed very purposefully south

whereas this juvenile was honing its hunting skills


Cranes (trane)

adult Grey Plover (tundralo) with a Temminck's Stint (trust me)

Bluethroat (blåstrupe) in the Dale

2 Bluethroats having an altercation

a leucistic Coot (sothøne) at Østensjøvannet - I initially thought a large bird had shat on him!

adult Hobby (lerkefalk) in Maridalen

Little Grebes (dvergdykker). The bird on the right is an adult in summer plumage (not often I have seen this plumage in Norway) and the other bird probably a bird of the year

not ofthen you see them in flight


Slavonian Grebe (horndykker) - I'm not sure whether this is an adult in transitional plumage or a youngster

this bird also decided to fly