CFFC: Bird Life on the Ponds

Cee’s Fun Foto Challenge this week has the topic of animals in nature.

Residents in the Moorings community have been concerned for some time about our female swan on West Pond. She has been sitting on her eggs for eight weeks at least and seems to be getting skinnier! In spite of her perseverance in incubating her eight eggs, she has shown some frustration of late, even pecking at the eggs to try to get them to hatch!

We took a walk just after noon today. It was a beautiful day with high temps in the 70s, so taking a walk at this time of day was delightful. We saw both of the swans leisurely swimming in the pond – the female’s eggs never hatched and were taken away last weekend in a bucket by personnel from the swan farm. So sad! Feeling carefree, the cob kicked his legs for momentum and then just let them drag behind him in the water – I’d never seen this behavior before! I didn’t get a photo of that, but I did get a close-up of him standing on the bank with his wide webbed feet! (I was able to get surprisingly close to him and the ducks, so these photos taken with my cellphone camera came out great!)

Surrounding him was a group of mallard ducks, mostly drakes, just chillin’ in the sunshine or taking naps. We saw one mama duck followed by eight ducklings, a family that I had not seen before. The ducklings were several weeks old, I guessed. They were too far away to get a good photo, since I had only my cellphone with me today.

These ducks and swans were on West Pond. As we passed East Pond, we were surprised to see a large number of Canada geese coming down the bank and into the water. Once they were in the water, they separated into family groups and we could see that several of them were goslings, who followed their respective parents. There were nine goslings altogether! I had not seen these families before; these goslings have already passed the “cute” stage! It was interesting that they were all together, instead of the adults threatening each other to stay away. Perhaps they’re all related!

The adults were wary of us, though!

Here are some mallard duck families that I photographed earlier this month, one with two half-grown offspring, the other with seven little ones. Ducklings don’t ever pass the “cute” stage!

The red-winged blackbird made all his noises at us, thinking he was threatening us as he flitted from tree to tree, following our movements.

Meanwhile, a mallard drake showed off for us – thank you, drake! You let me get a great photo of you!

5 thoughts on “CFFC: Bird Life on the Ponds

    • Yes, and last year the same swan lost her eggs when a storm inundated her nest and the eggs were washed into the water! So for two years, we’ve had no cygnets! And to add insult to injury, the female swan lost her original mate in late March (of this year, two weeks after they arrived), when he died of unknown cause. So the male she is with now is not her chosen partner. No one really knows what happened.

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