Monday and Tuesday were spent exclusively in
Maridalen and were very successful. The variety of birds is not enormous with
only 37 species chalked up but when they include great views of Grey-headed
Woodpecker, Pygmy Owl and Great Grey Shrike then I at least am not complaining.
I
had both the Grey-headed ‘peckers and one was seen feeding on fat balls and the
other on apples highlighting again that they are not your run of the mill
woodpecker.
I
also had Pygmy Owls at 2 different which showed ridiculously closely and looking at my photos I think it was the same bird that had moved nearly a kilometre. I
finally saw one with a mouse and I am sure this is a first for me despite
having watched the species for many tens of hours over the years. Thinking
about it, the only times I have previously witnessed any owls capturing food
are a couple of times with both Great Grey Owl and Hawk Owl.
The
mouse today was deposited in an old Great Spotted Woodpecker hole (most
recently used by nesting Starlings) and the owl was straight out hunting again.
The
Great Grey Shrike is easily the most trusting individual of the species I have
seen and perched in the sunshine preening whilst I stood underneath it. The
bird is an adult and could therefore quite likely be a bird that has wintered
in the Dale before and therefore got used to being close to people.
Be warned that there are quite a few pictures 😀👇
 |
not the closest picture I took of one of the Grey-headed Woodpeckers (gråspett) but my favourite |
 |
here looking for insects in cavities in a telegraph pole |
 |
the red feathers visible on the crown |
 |
and inspecting cavities in a tree |
 |
using its tongue |
 |
again on a barn. You will see this same barn in my Pygmy Owl pictures lower down |
 |
eating an apple |
 |
and eating fat balls |
 |
Pygmy Owl (spurveugle) with a mouse! |
 |
searching for food from the same barn that the pecker also visited |
 |
a selfie with a Pygmy |
 |
and from another angle (photo Glenn Martin) |
 |
on the roof top. The hearing is amazing. At one point it flew 30m after hearing a mouse behind it and immediately went into hunt mode low down in a bush |
 |
as you see here. It was leaning so far forward ready to drop down on a mouse that it looked as though it would lose its balance |
 |
this was the second owl I found which was hunting in a more natural terrain |
 |
heard something |
 |
look at those claws |
 |
all fluffed up |
 |
with an angry Nuthatch (spettmeis) |
 |
and some angry Yellowhammers (gulspurv) |
 |
decorating a christmas tree Norwegian style |
 |
the owl suddenly adopted this alert posture when a flock of Redpolls started mobbing it. Note the ears and how thin it looks |
No comments:
Post a Comment