In the weekend from 22/11-23/11 I was doing a geese survey for the Faroese National Museum, counting the wintering population of geese and swan. Me and Bartal surveyed Suðuroy on 22/11 and Streymoy 23/11. Of course the main goal was counting geese but we were hopeful of finding something "fun" ie. rare. The survey on Suðuroy took us all over the place with highlights being 51 Purple Sandpipers at Famijn and a Great Cormorant at Hvalba, and after finishing surveying the entire island, we hurried back to Hvalba to give at last do-over at Kjógvavatn, the nr. 1 gull-spot in Faroe Islands. Parked the car and immediately a smaller gull standing next to the black-headed gulls. I got the scope out and saw pink/flesh coloured feet, black bill and greyish neck - Bonaparte's Gull! 4th record for Faroe Islands, a last minute bird and it very quickly flew off, showing of its dainty, ternlike features and translucent wings, like an arctic tern.
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| Flesh coloured legs and dainty black bill = Bonaparte's Gull |
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| I was surprised how tiny it was compared to the black-headed gulls, I thought that first I was looking at a Little Gull |
Me and Bartal were excited and the sun set in west, we then went to the ferry harbour and waited for the boat. While waiting, we talked about the we only needed to find Ivory Gull and Ross's Gull and then we are set with rare gulls on Faroe Islands, with a crazy streak of Caspian Gull, Mediterranean Gull and Little Gull (all of them actually seen at the same spot as the Bonaparte's Gull), but while talking we found out that someone had asked in the FB-group "Fuglar í Føroyum" if the bird he had taken a video of was "an albino gull" - NOPE, IVORY GULL! Immediately we started planning when and how, but we knew that it had to wait 24/11, since we had one day of surveying left, and we started counting the seconds until we could go see it.
The next day we started the surveying on Streymoy, with high hopes of finding something fun once again. Bartal wanted to see Common Moorhen and Bullfinch, both annual, both rare birds on Faroe Islands. After several hours of driving we were finally heading to Saksun and we started talking about the ducks we wanted to see, and we started talking about how it had been a few years since the last American Black Duck was seen on Faroe Islands, and no kidding, when we reached the lake right before Saksun, there were five ducks, two teals, two mallards and one American Black Duck! We got out and got some nice photos and then we kept going, we had geese to count. When we arrived at Hvalvík, we found a flock of geese and while counting a Common Moorhen jumped out from a bush and standing feeding with the geese! A nice bird up here far north and very unexpected. We then drove towards Tjørnuvík, which is as far north as you can go on Streymoy by car, seeing no geese along the way, and stopped for 10 minutes at the village. While checking the cliffs for geese, Bartal called and said he had found a Bullfinch! a nice female, showing extremely well and offering some nice photo opportunities. It flew off and we went on our merry way, what a crazy day!
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| Last time I saw it was in 2010 at 300 meters distance, this was an amazing redemption |
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| Spot on, though the white edge at the back of the speculum looks a bit strong... |
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| Non-breeding adult, a nice addition to the Faroe Islands List |
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| As per usual on Faroe Islands, the birds offer amazing views! |
The next day we went almost straight to Klaksvík after we dropped off a good friend of mine at the airport, though we checked the harbours along the way, with Silas offering reassurance that the Ivory Gull was still there by sending photos and video along the way. When we arrived we couldn't find it immediately at the harbour, but we found it on the opposite side of the coast and we hurried towards it, and there we could see it at close range and with an amazing backdrop! Wow, amazing, insane and many other superlatives could describe this bird, probably top 3 birds I have seen, I hope it stays for a long time, I am definitely going to visit it again, spend some hours with it - a dream come true. After the gull we went to Viðareiði to see if we can find another rarity, but no dice and drove home while eating some well-deserved hotdogs.
What a three day streak of star birds, I hope the rest of winter will be like this, Ross's Gull next?
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