Pages

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Spring birding in Tromso by Wim Vader

Yet another note by  by Wim Vader (Wim.Vader@tmu.uit.no) of Tromso Museum, this time about Spring birds in Tromso, a note he wrote for one of the birding chatrooms back in 2005. I felt obliged to repost it here as a reminder to self about birding possibilities up north ... Spring is =4 deg C up north, I hope there is much more light then to see the birds.

"SPRING BIRDING IN TROMSO

These last winters have been 'easy' here at 70*N, with never much more than 1 m  
of snow on the ground, no periods of extreme cold (which here , on an island near the open sea, anyway only is something like -15 to -18*C), and a  reasonably early snow melt. Now, 21 April, there are large bare patches near  the sea and on sunny open places, and the official snow-depth can't be much more than 1-2 feet. The optimists are already changing from the studded winter  wheels on their cars to summer wheels , but the 'snow-sticks along the roads, guiding the snowploughs, are still there, and now and then fresh snow showers  bring a temporary return of wintery feelings. But in general the weather is somewhat mild, with temperatures above freezing during the day.

That is not to say that we have glorious weather: these last days have been  mostly grey and dreary, with low clouds lying like wet rags halfway up the hills, and constant drizzle varying between rain and sleet. But last weekend was not so bad, and on Sunday it was calm and intermittently sunny, so we grabbed the chance to go out---we being both my daughters and grandchild Marte  of 1 1/2 years. For her---or maybe rather for grandfather-- it was a red-letter  day, as her mother showed her her very first amphipods in the intertidal at 
Tisnes! (Pappadyr=daddy-animals these were known as when my kids were small).

At Tisnes where we had a picnic, there were hundreds of Eiders in the sound  just offshore and their cooing was a constant backdrop. Also the gulls were back; pairs of Common Gulls just start occupying their territories again, and the larger gulls have come further and will soon have their first eggs. Lapwings demonstrate their flying abilities during acrobatic displays, and now and then one hears the bronze flute of the Curlew. Tisnes is also a favourite place for Shelducks, and their crisp colours and proud stance were much admired. Otherwise the Redshanks are back, but the Golden Plovers and Ruffs not  yet, and of dabbling dicks I have hitherto only seen Mallards (galore!), a few Wigeons, and a lone male Pintail. The first Greylag Geese were also back and I 
also saw 5 Pinkfoot Geese, on their way to Svalbard. Dominating this day, here  as well as elsewhere on Kvaløya, are the large flocks of Snow Buntings,  fattening up here for a few weeks before their arduous crossing to Greenland;  they are a joy to behold, as flocks of often as many as a few hundreds wheel and turn, white in the sun.

The weather was in fact so pleasant this day (although the temp hardly crept  past +4*C) that we decided to drive out to the coast, to our favourite walking island of Hillesøy, where the snow was practically completely gone except in very shady places, and where the peat underground gives always an extra spring to our steps, so even little Marte walked by herself for long stretches. While we were celebrating the coming spring with an ice outside the café on Sommarøy (Norwegians eat ice all year round, in fact), no less than 4 adult White-Tailed Sea Eagles circled overhead, and the first Ringed Plovers of the year tripped on the sandy beaches. Also here there are small flocks of Snow Buntings,  and a raven carried out acrobatic display flights overhead.

On the shore we had a view of large lines of hundreds of Common Eiders, while the skerries were festooned with Cormorants, and here and there a stark black and white Black Guillemot gleamed in the beautiful backlit conditions. On the shore the thin reels of the Rock Pipits also talked of spring, and on the walk back we stumbled across a pair of Willow Grouse, the very cocky cock strutting around all white still, but with a brown neck and very conspicuous red 'eye-brows', while the hen ducked down and played invisible, not so easy when you are still white and most of the snow is gone.

The landscape itself is still brown and uninviting looking, and the only flowers are the yellow stars of the Coltsfoot Tussilago farfara, locally extremely common on road verges and other disturbed places, as the pioneers 
they are. At Tisnes old Puffballs still 'smoke' and this time there was also much evidence that Moose had been here recently, in addition to the more common. Reindeer. And at Hillesøy we glimpsed a few ¨springere' (jumpers), the White-nosed Dolphin Lagenorhynchus, so-called because its proclivity to jump right out of the water.

Not many songbirds as yet, but others have already noted the first Fieldfares and Chaffinches, and when I return to Tromsø after two weeks abroad, around 10 may, there will be much more to listen to and write about.


Wim Vader, Tromsø Museum
9037 Tromsø, Norway
wim.vader@tmu.uit.no"



The view that greeted us as we were driving towards our cabin in Oldervik, 11th May 2013. It was +10deg C ... everyone was sunbathing ...

Are these late arrivals or early migrants on route to Greenland. After almost a week of driving around Tromso, these fellas arrived just a day before we flew home! Resplendant colors!

No comments:

Post a Comment