Winter on the Faroe Islands is usually rainy, windy, cold and dark, with snow usually limited to the mountainstops. But the recent coldspell caused by winds from the SE had pushed plenty of continental birds towards Faroe Islands. 12/2 I was doing surveys on behalf SEV and Tjóðsavni concerning the placement of windmills on the island of Sandoy. On the mountains we found several Snow Buntings and by Sandsvátn we found 3 Northern Lapwings, 3 Skylarks, 1 Eurasian Shelduck, all scarce visitors! Saturday me, Bartal and Silas decided to go to Suðuroy to see if the cold at pushed anything of interest to the island! We hoped for White's Thrush, Great Bittern and Blue Tit. Though none of that came true, we still managed to see some interesting birds. Highlights were Mistle Thrush, 14th record, Tundra Bean Goose, 22nd record and Little Grebe, 18th record, though my personal favourite was a 1st winter Kumliens' Gull that Silas found at Lopra. Other highlights were 4 Northern Lapwings, 5 Skylarks, 26 Great Northern Divers and the sheer amount of thrushes, with a estimate of 30-40 redwings of both ssp. iliacus and coburni, 15+ Fieldfares, 2 Song Thrushes and of course the Mistle Thrush, with the bulk of the thrushes being found in a single village, Porkeri. The bean goose was found while searching for the lapwings and the little grebe was found by a local birdwatcher!
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| Skylarks are very scarce to scarce visitors, with almost all records from autumn. 8 individuals in february is quite the number |
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| Song Thrush is also a quite scarce species, that is almost always found during influxes, but two in february is quite the records |
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| The star of the show! My second Mistle Thrush on Faroe Islands, with the last being in 2016 |
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| It doesn't get more faroese than this |
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| Officially the most boring rarity to find on the faroe islands. |
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