Tag Archives | geese

Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge

THIS OUTING HAS BEEN MOVED TO SUNDAY THE 28TH DUE TO WEATHER CONDITIONS

Northern Shoveler Pair

On Sunday January 28th we will tour the Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge. Caravan leaves the parking lot at Kutras next to the park at 6:00 am or meet at the parking lot at the refuge at 7:30 am. We will have walkie talkies to hand out to each vehicle. If we are lucky, the new visitor center will be open by then, if not, portable restrooms are located in the parking lot and at the half-way point on the auto tour at the viewing platform. Bring a lunch and snacks to eat during the tour and at our pause at the platform. There is an entrance fee, dependent on your age and situation, see the link below for information. Most of the drivers have a permit already.
https://www.fws.gov/refuge/sacramento/sacramento-nwr-complex-passes-and-permits

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Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge Outing

The Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge is a national gem, well worth the short, 90 mile drive to Willows. Enormous numbers of waterfowl fill the sky and the impoundments in fall and winter. Snow, Ross’s and Greater White-fronted Geese, Northern Pintails, Northern Shovelers and Gadwalls are assured. Possibilities are White-faced Ibis, Green-winged and Cinnamon Teal, Black-necked Stilts and various raptors, including Bald Eagle and Peregrine Falcon. Most of the birding is done from cars. We will provide 2-way radios to report sightings and alert people in other cars to look for them. Meet your leader at 7:30 am sharp at Kutras Park on Park Marina Drive to carpool or at the visitor center at 9:00am, and bring a lunch for this full-day trip. Fees to enter the refuge are $6 per car for the day. Most carpool drivers have senior lifetime passes and can enter for no additional fee. For more information call Larry Jordan @ 949-5266

*All participants, ages 5 and older, must provide proof that they are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 or provide evidence of a negative COVID-19 test within 72 hours prior to the field trip. Participants must practice social distancing when outdoors on field trips and must wear masks and practice social distancing while indoors. Participation is not currently allowed for persons under the age of 5.

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The Lonesome Goose

Canada Goose with Young

Canada Goose with Young

The number of Canada Geese inhabiting the Sacramento River area as well as ponds and lakes in the northern Sacramento Valley seems to be increasing every year.  The California Department of Fish and Wildlife affirms this with both aerial and ground counts of the species each year. Increased food supplies from grain and rice fields seem to surpass nutrients the geese can find farther south. Large lawns and golf courses are another attractant.

Canada Geese In Flight

Canada Geese In Flight

The consistent  “V-shaped” flying formations and lilting chatter  of the Canada Goose is familiar to most northern California residents. Some people call these waterfowl “HONKERS” due to these vocalizations. The large size and distinctive plumage of these geese with black heads and necks and a bold white cheek patch combined with gray brown bodies and white feathers under their tails make them easy to identify. Their wingspans range from 43 to 60 inches, varying among subspecies. Some researchers estimate 4 total Canada Goose subspecies while others estimate as many as 11, grouping the 4 smaller subspecies as a separate species, Cackling Geese.

The colorization of males and females is identical in all the groups. However, the male is larger and holds his body more upright, ready to defend his mate or offspring.

Canada Geese typically nest close to water, building their nest with large mounds of vegetation such as grass or reeds and lining it with down. The female usually lays 4 to 8 eggs before she begins to incubate them. It takes from 25 to 30 days before the eggs hatch. When one sees a pair of geese with 12 to 18 goslings it is usually because another female has parasitized their nest, adding her eggs to their own.

Canada Goose On Nest

Canada Goose On Nest

Goslings are precocial, which means they can swim, walk and feed as soon as they hatch. They are led to the water where they find grasses, tender herbs and even water insects the day after they hatch. Canada Geese are excellent parents. One adult swims in front and the other behind with a straight line of goslings between them. Both adults guard while the young feed, and when feeding is done, it’s the same routine: one parent in front and one behind with the offspring in a straight line between them. Ducklings only have the female to guard them and baby ducks tend to swim and feed helter-skelter, making them much more vulnerable to predators.  Female ducks often lose many of their little ones, while geese rarely lose even one gosling.

Canada Geese with Goslings

Canada geese form strong bonds within their family unit which includes the adult pair and all of the goslings, who seem to imprint on their parents as well as all their siblings. Groups of five to twelve flying in their “V” formations are likely to be a family group from the previous year. Young geese usually do not breed until they are 2 to 4 years old.

Mated pairs of Canada Geese can be together as long as 20 years but usually find new mates if one of them dies. Last year a devoted pair of geese nested and raised five goslings on the edge of the Sacramento River just below this reporter’s house. The male guarded them fiercely, so the family prospered and all five fledged. The original pair returned the following year, but unfortunately something happened to the female, so she couldn’t fly or swim. Eventually she disappeared, likely the victim of some predator.

Canada Goose Portrait

Canada Goose Portrait

The lonesome gander remained close to where she had been for about a week. He then joined a small flock of other geese and flew away with them. However, he returned after just 10 minutes. Another lone goose came and stayed with him for a few days and then they flew off but after about an hour he was back. This sort of thing happened repeatedly for several weeks. It was well over a month before he left for good.

Now we have a new pair of Canada Geese checking out the same nesting area. It may be our faithful lonesome goose returning with a new mate. Neither bird is banded, and they look identical. Guess we’ll never know, but we wish them luck and success.

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Eclipse of the Ducks

Mallard Drake in Eclipse Plumage

Mallard Drake in Eclipse Plumage

When most people hear the term “eclipse” they think lunar or solar. But those familiar with waterfowl understand the term might refer to the feathers, or plumage, of a duck or goose.

Mallard Female

Mallard Female

All birds molt, a process of dropping old feathers and growing new ones. The new feathers keep the birds in good shape for flying, keeping warm, and sometimes for breeding showiness. By the end of summer the bright feathers of spring might be difficult to recognize. Many birds molt in the fall to replace worn plumage, and then again in spring to acquire their most alluring outfits.

Mallard Pair

Mallard Pair in Breeding Plumage

But waterfowl—ducks and geese—choose their mates earlier than songbirds. Ducks usually pair up by late fall, and cannot wait until spring to dress up. Male ducks, in particular, have gorgeous plumage, but in late summer all the males seem to disappear. The Sacramento River gains a steady supply of feathers floating downstream, and no male ducks are to be seen. The beautiful shining green heads of mallards vanish. The ornate wood ducks and brilliant male mergansers can’t be seen anywhere. Suddenly there seem to be many female ducks along the river, but no colorful males of these common year-round species.

Mallard Drakes in Eclipse Plumage

Mallard Drakes in Eclipse Plumage

There’s a scientific reason. Most birds lose a few feathers at a time, replacing them piecemeal without seriously disrupting their lifestyle. But ducks shed all of their outer feathers when they molt, including their wing feathers. For a few weeks, they become flightless. Males acquire the same camouflage as the females, a useful protection while they cannot fly. An observer can distinguish a male mallard at this time only by his slightly larger body and large, yellow bill, in contrast to her orange and black bill. Males at this hapless stage tend to gather in small groups and skulk along shores with reeds and grasses, laying low until new flight feathers develop. After those new wing feathers grow back the males enter a second molt into their bright breeding plumage. The second molt is less severe, and the ducks retain their ability to fly and escape from predators. All of this happens in timely fashion—in the fall, just before the duck dating season opens.

Wood Duck Pair

Wood Duck Pair in Breeding Plumage

Female mallards, wood ducks, and mergansers are always attired in camouflage, so they only molt once—but again, it is in time to have fresh feathers for understated attractiveness when the males come looking.

Geese also molt in the fall, but they usually mate for life, and seem to dress for long-term health and beauty rather than for just a brief courting period. They do not molt all their wing feathers at once, so, although briefly disheveled, they retain the ability to fly.

Wood Duck Drake Preening

Wood Duck Drake Preening

Ducks and geese can often be seen preening their new feathers. They have oil glands on their rumps, which supply the waterproofing that they spread over their sleek contour feathers. The feathers have small barbs that lock their parts together, and combing them helps keep the birds smooth, warm, and attractive. Waterfowl instinctively know how important their feathers are, and do the work to maintain them.

Wood Duck Pair in Eclipse Plumage

Wood Duck Pair in Eclipse Plumage

Webster defines “eclipse” as to obscure, leave out or fail. He discusses the partial or total obscuring of one celestial body by another, making one seem less brilliant, but he makes no mention of the less brilliant plumage of male ducks in the fall. Ornithologists, however, have studied the annual phenomenon extensively. Eclipse plumage allows ducks to quickly molt into fresh breeding feathers. Understanding it solves the mystery of the disappearance of the male ducks.

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Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge Outing

Peregrine Falcon

This nationally known gem is well worth the 90-mile drive. Enormous numbers of waterfowl fill the sky and numerous impoundments in fall and winter. Snow, Ross’ and Greater White-fronted Geese, Northern Pintails, Northern Shovelers and Gadwalls are assured. Possibilities are White-faced Ibis, Green-winged Teal, Black-necked Stilts and various raptors. We hope to provide 2-way radios to report sightings and alert people in other cars to look for them. Most of the birding is done from cars. Meet at Kutras Park on Park Marina Drive to carpool. (See map.) Bring a lunch for this full-day trip. Mike Carion will lead.