Showing posts with label green sandpiper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label green sandpiper. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 April 2024

On the eve of

I write this on the last day of April and therefore the day before my favourite birding day of the year – 1 May. This day may not statistically prove to be that great but it is a national holiday and I will always be in Maridalen from dawn following the migration. What will turn up tomorrow? Red Kite? Black-shouldered Kite?? Pygmy Cormorant???.

Since my last post I have added the following to Oslo 2024: Greenshank #145, Pied Flycatcher #146 and Whinchat #147. So, 150 is definitely a possibility before the end of April. When I first started noting my Oslo list I thought 150 for the whole year was a good result!

Migration is delayed this year so we could have some good days ahead of us but unfortunately there is no rain forecast and just lots of sun so there will be no big falls of migrants.

In the Dale the swan drama has now settled down with the Whooper Swans on the nest and presumably incubating whilst the Mutes are on the other side of the lake. I cannot wait (a month) to see if the eggs hatch.

The male Three-toed pecker was still excavating the nest hole today and hasn’t come very yet. The entire chamber will probably take him a couple of weeks.

Svellet is looking scrumptious and now the birds just need to come. 25 Greenshank today was a 400% increase on the day before so it can just keep on going like that for a few days and we will all be happy.

variety in the Dale - Common Sand (strandsnipe), Green Sand (skogsnipe) and White Wag (linerle)

Golden Plovers (heilo) at Årnestangen




my first Oslo Greenshank (gluttsnipe) of the year!

I was as surprised as the Snipe (enkeltbekkasin) when I came around a corner and we made eye contanct


the male Three-toed Woodpecker (tretåspett) has not come that much further with his nest hole building



my first toad of the year

first Whinchat (buskskvett)

and first Yellow Wag (gulerle) although not in Oslo yet. A male thunbergii

and I bumped into this beauty


Monday, 19 June 2023

Last Lapwings finally hatch plus plus

I haven’t finished going through all my pictures from my memorable 24 hour trip last week so here is an update from Oslo.

The last Lapwing nest in Maridalen finally hatched yesterday. The female was still sitting in the morning but late afternoon she was off the nest and two tiny young were crouched there and she soon returned and sat on them and the remaining two eggs. I wonder if I will see them again. In the same field was one more half grown young and 4 other adults who may have had child care responsibilities.

A nocturnal trip around the Dale with Jr on Friday night revealed begging Tawny Owl young and a visit the next day found them with a watchful mum nearby. A single youngster was still in the nest but two much older ones were sitting together high up in a spruce watching us.

I had 3-4 Marsh Warblers and also heard the beautiful tones of a (Thrush) Nightingale but in the end concluded it was a mimicking Marsh Warbler as there was only ever a short element of song and it came from exactly the same area as a Marsh W was singing. It was however quite a way away and there were loud parties going on at seemingly every farm that evening so hearing birds was quite a challenge.

On the bug front I have two (for me) significant observations. First, I finally paid a visit to the only known locality in Oslo for the rare Lilypad Whiteface dragonfly (vanlilljelibelle) which was successful with 3 males sitting on…lilypads and on the way to their favoured forest pond a large shadow passed over me and my first proper views, and eventually photos, of a Poplar Admiral (ospesommerfugl) were a factum. This has been a long time coming but was an all too brief encounter.

I have also discovered a large population of Broad-bodied Chasers (blåbredlibelle) which shows that the species has colonised Oslo and done so very quickly when you consider there were only 10 records before this year. In addition to having the species in Maridalen an area of marshland that the council restored in 2021 in the forest of Lillomarka had at least 17 when I visited on Thursday.

mum and a more than half grown Lapwing (vipe), let us hope all the other young and well hidden in long grass which is why I can't find them


Tawny Owl (kattugle) mum on watch


two fairly large young which clearly can fly/climb well enough to get high up a tree


but one young hadn't left the nest box yet


Lilypad Whiteface dragonfly (vannliljelibelle)



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and with a Large Redeye damselfly (rødøyevannymfe)


and my first proper sighting of a Poplar Admiral (ospesommerfugl) flying along a shady forest track

before briefly stopping


and on my return I found it or the same one perched high up in a tree


Broad-bodied Chaser (blåbredlibelle)

a far more eye catching beast from above

the restored march where the chaser and may other dragons and damsels were. This original marsh had been drained and commercial spruc planted many decades ago but the council removed all the trees and dammed up the drainage ditches and a great marsh is redeveloping. Green Sandpipers also breed here

judging by the noise this Green Sandpiper (skognsnipe) was making there must have been young nearby

Tuesday, 11 April 2023

Easter over

 Easter birding in Maridalen saw the number of species increase each day and on Sunday morning I recorded 60 species https://ebird.org/checklist/S133145962

With no overnight frosts and some rain the snow is disappearing although surprisingly slowly and the lake will remain frozen for a number more weeks. A number of new species have turned up including Teal, Green Sandpiper, Ring Ouzel and Twite and I have exceptionally (and therefore unrealistically) high expectations for tomorrow and feel certain a Red Kite will turn up…

In addition to Maridalen I have also headed east and visited the Taiga Bean Geese who had the company of 5 White-fronted Geese. There were also lots of Cranes and Whooper Swans in the area but raptors were much scarce than I expected. Two Marsh Harriers were my first of the year though.

Cranes (trane) and Whooper Swans (sangsvane)


Great Grey Shrike (varsler) in Maridalen which I believe to be the wintering bird rather than a spring migrant


my first Green Sandpiper (skogsnipe) for 2023 found only icy margins in Maridalen

open water where the Dausjøelva river enters Maridalsvanet

Moose

I have seen a number of flocks of Pink-footed Geese (kortnebbgås) migrating over Maridalen but this was the first bird on the lake. Together with a couple of Greylags (grågås)

female Sparrowhawk (spurvehauk)

Taiga Bean Geese (taiga sædgås) with a couple of Pink-feet

Twite (bergirisk) in Maridalen


White fronted Geese (tundragås) . 3 adults with extensive black belly barring and 2 young birds


my first Golden Plovers (heilo) of the year deserve a photo no matter how bad it is

male Marsh Harrier (sivhauk). He was calling although I never saw him together with the female

female

first Ring Ouzel (ringtrost)..

male Smew (lappfiskand) at Kallaksjøen




the Whtie-fronted Geese again