Many of the eagles we see here are often presumed to be, and indeed often prove to be, birds drifting northward from Scottish Introduction schemes. Interestingly though, true vagrants can and do occur here from Norway. In December 2012 I was delighted to discover an immature individual on a beautiful calm, crisp and bright mid-winter's morning, flying over our house!
Photographs taken of it a few weeks later by Robbie Brookes showed it to be bearing colour rings. A quick bit of research told me that nowhere in Scotland used the colour combination but that Norway seemed most likely. Similar to the way in which international collaboration quickly led to unprecedented discoveries with the whales, by contacting researchers in Norway we found it to be one of their birds!
This was the first Norwegian bred white-tailed eagle they had known to have crossed the North Sea and confirmed in UK. This is of course something that quite obviously occurs but, without colour rings, could not be confirmed.
So, if there are species and spectacles that inspire you to think of a winter holiday in Norway, you mightn't need to travel that far to see them...