søndag den 14. december 2025

Five hours of sunlight and plenty a wind

 The days are indeed getting shorter and shorter now. The wind is rarely less than 8 m/s and rain showers the islands periodically, yet there are birds to find, if one looks hard enough. The passerines is not a priority, but five Siberian Chiffchaffs at once in my garden, with a Blackcaps on 26/11 is quite the record! We very rarely get any warblers this late in the year, 28/11 yielded another Eurasian Coot in the local harbour, while I was getting the boat storm-ready, sadly not an American Coot, but any time now, we should get another record. Otherwise, highlights have been a Rook over Tórshavn 5/12, Common Pochard in Gróthúsvatn, along with a male Goosander, Common Shelduck in Sandsvatn, Little Grebe at Heimara Hálsavatn 17th record for Faroe Islands and one of my personal highlights: A nice adult male King Eider in Sørvágsfjørður on 7/12.

Barely annual on the Faroe Islands


Common Pochard and Common Merganser together

Little Grebe - Found it while driving 80 km/h past a lake, made a U-turn and boom, there it was

In the cover of my car, I scanned 600+ eiders, there it was!

So there is no lack of niceties on the Faroe Islands. But winter is for the gulls, and I have had two gull-highlights: A 1cy Great Black-backed Gull X Glaucous Gull at Vestmanna 29/11-2025 and a 2cy mystery gull at Skansin in Tórshavn 12/12 - 2025
Large GBBG-like gull with bicoloured bill with a shape inbetween GBBG and Glaucous Gull

Pale underparts and non-black primaries.

Like an opaque GBBG

But the real nutcracker of a gull was a this one. I can not share any informed opinion of my own, as I am in the deep end with this bird. 

















The colder, the better!

 Winter on the Faroe Islands is usually rainy, windy, cold and dark, with snow usually limited to the mountainstops. But the recent coldspel...