A Birdwatcher’s Guide to Norway

Where, when and how to find Scandinavia’s most sought-after birds

  • Covers over 350 of Norway's best birdwatching sites.
  • 265 photos and 95 maps.
  • Detailed information on seeing King Eider, Steller’s Eider, Gyrfalcon, displaying Capercaillie, Jack Snipe, Ruff, Little Bunting, Arctic Warbler and many more.
    £40.00
    We currently have 980 in stock.

    Tags:
    • birding
    • birds
    • birdwatching
    • natural history
    • norway
    • ornithology
    • site guide

    Description

    A Birdwatcher's Guide to Norway helps you find all the birds of Norway and Svalbard, and guides you in detail to more than 350 of the best birdwatching sites in this beautiful and wild but still highly developed and civilised country.

    The book explains in detail: where and when to go, what species to expect and hope for! The best tactics to approach each site, how to use tower hides and observation shelters and other animals you may encounter.

    Norway offers some of the most sought-after species in Europe, including King Eider, Steller’s Eider, Gyrfalcon, displaying Capercaillie, Jack Snipe, Ruff and other Arctic shorebirds in full breeding plumage, singing Little Bunting and Arctic Warbler, and many more. The country can be referred to as 'an easily accessible part of Siberia'.

    Packed with 265 photos, 95 maps and comprehensive information about each site, A Birdwatcher's Guide to Norway an essential travel guide essential for anyone planning a trip to watch birds in Norway or Svalbard.

    A lot has changed since the first edition came out 15 years ago. This is most evident in regards to the infrastructure: roads keep improving and changing course, ferries have in some places been replaced by bridges or tunnels, new tower hides are built. Maps and text have been updated accordingly. There have been quite a few changes in bird-life as well, such as that Barred Warbler no longer breeds regularly along the Skagerrak coast, and the number of pairs of most cliff-breeding seabirds are greatly reduced to a point where e.g. Leach's Storm-Petrel is no longer to be expected on boat trips in Lofoten. On the positive side, the population of Rustic Bunting seem to be recovering, Red-flanked Bluetail is on the move into Norway, and Great Grey Owl now breeds regularly near Oslo. Furthermore, the book has been expanded to a slightly larger format, allowing for easier-to-read maps and even more stunning images taken by some of the best photographers in the country. The soft, flexible binding is more robust than that of the first edition.

    Table of Contents

    Prefaces
    Welcome to Norway
    The Oslo area
    Interior south
    Coastal Skagerrak
    Western Norway
    Central Norway
    Northern Norway
    Finnmark
    Svalbard
    Selected species
    References
    Index of sites and places

    Reviews

    • This book is a MUST-HAVE for anyone birding Norway!
      —Ian Paulsen, The Birdbooker Report
    • This is simply the book for anyone planning a bird trip up in the north... the book provides excellent guidance for anyone who wants to see as many birds as possible on their trip to Norway.
      —Jon Fjeldså, The Scientific Journal of The Danish Ornithological Society

    About the Author

    Bjørn Olav Tveit (b.1970) from Oslo, Norway has been an avid birdwatcher since childhood. He has trawled the country and explored all the best birding sites. He was a long-standing member of the Norwegian Rarity Committee for Birds (NSKF) and is the nature conservation contact for a local chapter of BirdLife Norway. At times he guides nature enthusiasts who want to experience Norway’s rich birdlife. When he is not outdoors birdwatching or indoors writing books, he makes music and works in the Norwegian Ministry of Culture.

    Bibliographic Information

    • 478 pages
    • BISAC SCI070040, SCI087000, NAT004000, NAT043000
    • BIC PSVW6, PSAB, WNCB