birding-aus

Tromsø Easter

To: Willem Jan Marinus Vader <>
Subject: Tromsø Easter
From: Laurie Knight <>
Date: Sun, 19 Apr 2020 07:53:07 +1000
G’day Wim

Anyone who has been in Australia over the last ten years and who casts doubt on 
the reality of climate change is like the proverbial pirate buried up to his 
neck on the beach who proclaims he has nothing to fear from the sea.  

Climate change has certainly not been kind to the people and birds of Australia.

Regards, Laurie.

> On 18 Apr 2020, at 5:54 pm, Willem Jan Marinus Vader <> wrote:
> 
> There is a fundamental difference between weather and climate. Yes, we still 
> have 1.60 m of snow here in Tromsø, and temperatures hover around the 
> freezing point. At the same time S. Norway and W. Europe  have the earliest 
> spring they can remember, and there are warnings of bushfires out in SE 
> Norway.
> All this is weather and not climate. The fact that 8 of the 10 warmest years 
> in the last 150 years happened in  the last ten years, that is due to climate 
> changes.
> Wim Vader, Tromsø, Norway
> From:  <>
> Sent: Saturday, April 18, 2020 6:05 AM
> To: Willem Jan Marinus Vader <>; 'birding-aus' 
> <>; 'Birdchat' <>; 
> 'sabirdnet' <>
> Subject: RE: [Birding-Aus] Tromsø Easter
>  
> Hi all,
> So Global warming has skipped Northern Europe for the time being?
> Doesn’t Greta come from up there somewhere? Maybe she could post a photo of 
> herself in hip depth snow for all her beloved followers……
>  
> Kind Regards,
>  
> Rod Mackay
> <image001.png>
>            p  +61  02 4950 5706    m  +61 041 96333 45
>                  www.ramackayboating.com.au
>          <image002.png>       <image003.jpg>
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
>  
> Think before you print-save a tree today.  This email may contain personal 
> and confidential material, if you have received in error, delete immediately. 
>  
> From: Birding-Aus <> On Behalf Of Willem 
> Jan Marinus Vader
> Sent: Tuesday, 14 April 2020 4:01 AM
> To: birding-aus <>; Birdchat 
>  <>; sabirdnet 
> <>
> Subject: [Birding-Aus] Tromsø Easter
>  
> ​ ​Tromsø Easter--not really spring as yet
>             From everywhere in the northern half of the world come stories of 
> spring, flowers and nesting birds. This time a year the differences with the 
> situation here north are at a maximum, and this year maybe even more than 
> usually. While at least northern Europe, including southern Norway, has 
> enjoyed a very early spring, the situation is very different here at 70*N. I 
> wish I could send you some pictures, but you'll have to imagine 2 m of snow 
> on the ground, and more falling every day this week,  and completely bare 
> trees as yet. And very few migrant birds as yet either; the only song I hear 
> in Folkeparken is the 'sawing' of the Great Tit and the 'rasps' of 
> Greenfinches, both residents here. On the shore the Oystercatchers are back, 
> and i have seen the first Common Gulls, the classical town gull here; 
> although some Herring Gulls and Great Black-backed Gulls also nest on flat 
> roofs in town. The last 2-3 years we have had a sudden invasion of 
> Kittiwakes, that nest on window sills in town, and are very little popular 
> with the inhabitants; they have already returned. My daughter who has been 
> skiing at the outer coast reported flocks of Snow Buntings there; because of 
> the surfeit of snow here in town they keep to the outer coast this spring. 
> They are fattening up, on their way to the perilous journey across the 
> Atlantic to Greenland and arctic Canada.
>              My action radius is this year even more restricted than most 
> winters. As usual, my car has disappeared under the snow; I no longer drive 
> it in winter. But this spring Norway is also largely locked down because of 
> the corona pandemy, and especially people of my age are asked to keep largely 
> at home. I can make short walks along the larger roads, but the paths in 
> Folkeparken are often hard to conquer. I see therefore very few birds, except 
> the ubiquitous Magpies and Hooded Crows, and the large gulls and eider ducks 
> of the sounds.
>            I am eagerly awaiting the Chiffchaff (should have been here 
> already), the Fieldfare and Redwing, the Chaffinch and Brambling and a little 
> later the most common of them all, the Willow Warbler.
>          God Påske to all of you.
>          Wim Vader, Tromsø, Norway
> 
>       Virus-free. www.avast.com
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