Showing posts with label Puffin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Puffin. Show all posts

Friday, 4 November 2022

A seawatch and some auks

Some quite bad, and quite typical November, weather these last few days and with the clocks changing the days now feel very short. Rain, wind and low cloud do not make for good birding conditions either for the bird or the birder but on Thursday the wind was strong enough and from the south that I thought I would give seawatching a go from Fornebu. My expectations were low and I would have been happy with a Little Auk (which would have been my first for the year). A number of Guillemots and Razorbills were flying around so I thought my chance of the tiny cousin would be high but in the end I lucked out on that score. However, I did score much better on the auk front with first a probable Brunnich’s (I was sure of the ID at the time but without a conclusive photo my views were too brief to claim it as a definite - it is a truly rare bird in southern Norway and frequently strung so one should have a photo to bother claiming it) and then a definite Puffin! 4 Kittikwakes (an adult and 3 juv), a Great Northern Diver and 2 Long-tailed Ducks made for a very well used couple of hours by the sea!

The Bearded Tits continue to hide away in the reedbed and the thermal imager has proven useful in finding them but I have failed to find any Jack Snipe in their usual place for the last couple of days. Yesterday evening we had a brief respite from the wind and rain and I took the thermal imager up into Maridalen where Woodcocks were still on the fields and allowed close approach.

a Puffin (lunde)

a flock of Razorbills (alke) with a single Guillemot (lomvi) - can you find it?

Razorbills were the commonest auk to start with but by the end of the watch Guillemots had become the most numerous and I estimated having seen 120 Guillemot and 80 Razorbills

a young Razorbill

a 1cy and an adult Kittiwake (krykkje) approaching the Nesodden ferry

the adult

male Bearded Tit (skjeggmeis)

Beardies in the thermal imager - 7 bright spots and and a weak spot making 8 birds in total

Woodcock (rugde) using the flash

and no flash just torch. I don't understand why the colours come out SO differently

3 Woodcocks in the thermal imager

a single bird walking away after having just lightened the load


Saturday, 30 October 2021

Puffin n Piney

 It has continued to blow freshly from the south so the fjord has been of interest with the hope of some interesting seabirds. On Friday I watched from Fornebu rather than Huk as I needed to be close to the car and Halden Brygge allows you to watch basically from the car park. I already knew that a Puffin had been seen close by earlier in the day so this was again on my radar as was Brunnich’s Guillemot. There were lots of auks moving around and I tried to identify every bird I saw with over 200 Guillemot and around 40 Razorbill noted. One bird got my pulse racing for a bit but proved to be a Common Guillemot still in partial summer plumage but 2 Puffins were a lot easier to identify. One flew by on its own at relatively close range and allowed photos to be taken and half an hour later what I assume to be another bird flew past at much longer range with Guillemots and could be seen to fly close past Huk on the other side of the fjord.

I also went Grozza hunting and had 3 birds in Maridalen and 28 at Grefsenkollen all of which were probably 1st cy birds (no adult males). Today I had 25 in Maridalen of which one was an adult male. In the last week I have observed 112 birds and only 4 have been adult males. This ratio of 4% compares with about 40% two winters ago. What is driving this 10 fold difference?

 Tomorrow I am guiding with Grozzas, forest birds and seabirds hopefully all on the agenda. Let’s see what the Bird Gods have in mind for me…

Puffin (lunde) close to Fornebu with Huk, Bygdøy in the distance




Huk in the distance and Puffin close to it - honest. I actually reckon this does count as a record shot as the bird smudge to the left is a Guillemot and the Puffin to the right. The Puffin has dark underwings, stubby wings and a dark head whilst the other smudge doesn't .....

1st winter Kittiwake (krykkje)



14 of a flock of 21 Pine Grosbeaks (konglebit) with not an adult male in sight



Wawings (sidensvans)

Black-headed Gull (hettemåke)

2 Razorbills (alke) and a Guillemot (lomvi)

adult male Grozza from today



Sunday, 6 December 2015

Auk tastic

As forecast storm force winds hit the Oslo Fjord. Unfortunately there was too much west and not enough south in the wind for there to be too much action close to Oslo but there were birds. Reports from Saturday made it clear that it was going to be auks and Kittiwakes that would be the commonest birds with perhaps a skua or two to look for. Lots of auks can be exciting though and it was these I decided to spend time on. Trouble though is that separating Guillemots and Razorbills in flight is difficult enough especially when they are speeding by with a tail wind up their arses. The day started with streams of auks heading fast north with at least 700 birds noted in flocks of upto 30. When going north I only really had a chance of separating Little Auks out due to speed, range and light.

As the morning wore on the winds ebbed and the birds started heading south a lot more slowly and in better light (after 700 going north I counted 550 going south). Suddenly I was picking out Puffins! I had 4 birds heading south and 1 north all in the course of 50 minutes. I was now checking every auk and my hope was to find a Brunnich’s but to be honest I do not have the (super natural?) powers to take one for certain in flight at 1km range which is where most of the auks were (the middle of the fjord). However I did have a very good candidate with a dark head and seemingly more compact jizz than the Common Guillemots it was with but that wasn’t enough. How about trying to find one sat on the sea? A number of the auks were splashing down so I started scanning and 5 minutes later and what do you know? Alongide a flock of 5 winter plumage Common Guillemots was a bird that was much blacker and with nearly a completely dark head. This needed grilling as I needed to see more and be certain it wasn’t a Common Guillemot in summer plumage. I wasn’t able to see the white line over the bill at such range but I could see that the bill was shorter than the Common G’s, the head was a squarer shape and the white on the chest went up in a V into the black. Enough, for me at least, to be happy that this was a Brunnick's Guillemot (polaromvi) and a good bird (less than annual) in these parts.

My pictures from today are absolutely pants and don’t even fall into the record shot category.
a large flock of auks heading north
this flock heading south looks to be all Guillemots (lomvi)
Fulmar (havhest)
 
about the only pictures (despite many shots being taken) which just about shows a recognisable Puffin. The smaller more compact jizz plus the dark underwing are good characters as well as the grey head.
Two shots of the same Common Guillemot. This bird shows two features which according to Birding Frontiers new Winter Book should mean this is a Brunnichs namely a broad and even breast band plus black over the whole upper head. However jizz and bill show this to be a Common Guillemot. Behind the eye the bird does look to be a bit paler showing also that the picture is maybe too poor to make too many conclusions from.
The bird above reminded me though of this Common Guillemot from 22 Nov 2012. Initially reported as a Brunnich's it showed well enough for the structural characters (bill and head shape but long body) to be seen well enough to show it was just a Common as well as it lacking the white line over the bill (apparently called the tomium stripe). But it does seem to show that the other features highlighted by Birding Frontiers are not gold. In this individual another pro Common feature is that the white on the chest does not intrude up into the black in a V.

And to finish off the post an absolutely crap and completely non conclusive video of the Brunnich's:







This is the best snap shot I've managed to take from the video. You possibly get an idea of what the bird looked like...
 

 

Thursday, 9 July 2015

The long drive north


After a week in Beitostølen tradition has it that we visit the north of Norway and bring the good weather with us. This year I chose to drive the 1300km to Bodø and do a bit of birding on the way. The driving on Norway’s winding, narrow main road, the E6, is slow progress and one rarely has the chance to think that 80km/h is a ridiculously slow speed limit. Including birding stops one needs two days to make the journey but it does go quite quickly especially with a good book to listen to and a view out of the windscreen that gets progressively more exciting the further north one comes.

My first stop on the journey was at Hamar where I year ticked an American Wigeon. This must be a very exciting bird to find but as a twitch it was very uninspiring as it fed distantly in long grass with a handful of its European cousins. Continuing north in heavy rain I stopped in the car park of Fokstumyra nature reserve but chose not to get out of the car and drove instead further north where  I visited Orklesjøen for the first time. The long drive into the area through very barren mountain landscape was very promising but the lake itself did not live up to any of the expectations I had and it ended up being a rather frustrating waste of two hours that I could have used elsewhere.
After this I just kept driving and finally stopped to sleep just after midnight somewhere in Nordland County. At 9am the next morning I finally made it to the area that I had been looking forward to for the last 24 hours: Saltfjellet. This is a great tundra area right on the Arctic Circle and one I have visited a few times over the past two decades and seen lekking Ruff, Short-eared Owls, Red-necked Phalaropes, Rock Ptarmigan, Long-tailed Ducks and always had the thought that there should be something rarer to find. With this year being a good owl year in Northern Norway I had a hope that maybe I could find a Snowy Owl here (a google search showed that the Norwegian owl researchers had also though the same as they had requested permission to use helicopters in the National Park SHOULD there be breeding Snowy Owls there this year).

The sight of a number of Long-tailed Skuas (fjelljo) was very encouraging, in fact more than that very exciting! This is a species that I saw regularly on our first visits to Valdresflya around 10 years ago but which has not been present (for me at least) for the last five at least and which otherwise I have only seen in adult summer plumage in Finnmark. As a lemming specialist the present of at least 7 birds in a small area was a very encouraging sign but the strange thing was there were no Short-eared Owls, only a couple of Rough-legged Buzzards and I didn’t actually see a lemming (although did heard one in the undergrowth). So it was perhaps not surprising that I didn’t find a Snowy Owl.
The skuas were hunting by flying around and frequently hovering and would often call which would suddenly draw my attention to new birds. I had one bird that mobbed a Rough-legged Buzzard and this bird was then mobbed by an Arctic Tern which surprisingly are to be found high up on the tundra. My best encounter with the skuas came when I had seen a bird hunting a few hundred metres away which looked to land out of my sightline. I walked up towards it and then suddenly saw it perched not too far away and not too concerned by my presence. It allowed fairly close approach before flying off calling where it was joined by another bird. Both birds landed in a difficult to observe position but were clearly engaged in some courtship and I believe the other bird had brought in some food which was confirmed as one of the birds afterwards had a bit of pink meat stuck to its bill. I made my way closer to the birds and suddenly I realised I had come too close as I got the same treatment that had been meated out to the Rough-legged Buzzard before. I saw no sign of a nest or young but this pair was clearly very territorial and were maybe about to begin breeding.

Waders were not very numerous and I did not see a single Golden Plover which struck me as a bit alarming. I did have a couple of female Red-necked Phalaropes who were probably finished with their breeding duties and will soon be heading south again. I have previously had lekking Ruff up here and records suggest that there is still a small breeding population up here but it was probably too late in the year for me to see this species so my hopes of seeing lekking this year are well and truly over. Other waders I had were a flyover Dotterel, Whimbrel, Wood Sandpiper and Common Sandpiper.
There are surprising numbers of passerines high up on the tundra here with Willow Warblers, Yellow Wagtails, Redwings and Fieldfares feeling very out of place. More expected were good numbers of Lapland Buntings and Bluethroats. I had heard a single Bluethroat singing and played its song hoping to see it. What really surprised me was that at least 7 males appeared out of a small area of dwarf willow. They were obviously interested in the song but only a couple sang back and most seemed most interested in feeding. There was not a single female amongst them and I cannot believe that there could have been 7 pairs breeding in such a small area so I’m not quite sure what all these males were doing and what it means in terms of breeding success.

After Saltfjellet the next quality birding comes from the fjord at Fauske. This area can offer good numbers of waders and sea ducks, grebes and divers. It is a bit early for large numbers but I did have a male King Eider plus small numbers of Velvet Scoters, Common Scoters and Slavonian Grebes.
I had time for one more location before picking up the female contingent who were flying up and visited Seinesodden. I have been here once before and really liked it without having seen very much. A week ago though a Black-winged Pratincole was found here and the next day a female Steller’s Eider plus there being breeding Red-necked Phalaropes so it was well worth a visit. Of the three afore-mentioned species I only saw a single phalarope but the locality is great and I also met another birder which in itself is a rare occurrence in these parts. There were very good numbers of Redshanks here which were clearly breeding and I cannot remember ever having some across so many in such a small area. I encountered very few up on Saltfjellet and it can well be that the late snow melting has caused birds to nest lower down this year.

The drive up might be long (it takes me a couple of days to recover) but the changing scenery and occasional great birding on the way makes it worthwhile and I have the return trip to look forward to.
Long-tailed Skua (fjellfjo)
a poor picture of the two in some sort of courtship feeding
here with some meat stuck to the bill after the courtship feeding


 

"get orf my land"




hovering very much like a Kestrel whilst searching for food

mobbing a Rough-legged Buzzard

many pictures ended up with only a bit of the bird  in shot
 
an incredibly long tail


another failed shot which was a shame as it was sharp! Note the black feet




 


 
Bluethroat (blåstrupe)

this one was too close

they have toungues

male King Eider (praktærfugl)

together with a young male Common Eider in Black Guillemot plumage

female Lapland Bunting (lappspurv)


note the typical lower mandible of a bunting. There seems to be a lot of crap stuck to the bill of this bird

one of the Red-necked Phalaropes (svømmesnipe) on Saltfjellet

the (Common) Redpolls on Saltfjellet are for me a good case study in the fact that redpolls are just a clinal species that gets paler the further north one comes

Puffins (lundefugl) near Bodø. To see adult birds here at this time of the year is bad news as it means they have left their breeding colonies (most likely Røst) in search of food. Apparantly it is 14 years since the colony on Røst had fledged young
this picture of a Common Sandpiper (strandsnipe) was probably the highlight of a two hour detour to Orkelsjøen


 
Arctic Tern (rødnebbterne) at Orkelsjøen
 
and a Temminck's Stint
record shot of the American Wigeon (amerikablessand)