OMG: We have geese and goslings

April 30, 2018 • 2:30 pm

Well, the female 88K is back, and with her a new swain, 92P, and six goslings. Where did they come from? What do I do now? I know nothing of geese or how to tend them.

And of course Frank and Honey are gone, and won’t return with this crew around.

OMG. Well, I have to report 92P now, who must be a male.

88K was here a while back, and I reported her and got my Official Goose Spotter certificate. She must have been checking out the place in early April.

I’ll try to feed them now. . . .

37 thoughts on “OMG: We have geese and goslings

  1. You could leave it to nature. After all 92P and 88K are the descendants of an unbroken chain of individuals who managed to survive(at least until leaving progeny)going back 3bn years!

  2. Heh, if there’s one thing I know about Canada geese it’s that they don’t need our help. Just sit back and enjoy.

  3. I have seen mallard ducks and canada geese coexisting in the Gaywood River near where I live (with muscovy ducks, intermediate in size between the other two species, also in the equation).

  4. Such warm and fuzzy names Mrs 88K and Mr. 92P. I think you will need some names. Maybe Ralph and Alice.

  5. If Honey is siting on a clutch she may still be around. I’ve know plenty of geese & ducks to peacefully co-exist.

  6. The pond near my house has geese, mallards and wood ducks in it, so I agree that the geese don’t necessarily mean the ducks have been chased away.
    Maybe the goose researchers will want to band the goslings.

    1. That is funny, Mr Bath.
      I am sorry, Canada; but that is a stitch !

      You will be here all week, I wager, not ? !

      Blue

  7. Try to ID the goslings if possible. Keep track of the days . . . and let’s see if they go off to a goose nursery and where that nursery may be. But these are urban geese. I’d be fascinated to know.

    My other thought: why are they tracking them? Here they are being, well, taken out, frequently because of water quality problems at public beaches.

    Congrats on the certificate!

  8. The Canada Geese and the Mallards get along very well here on Loving Creek. I’ve never seen any interaction between them whatsoever, and I have plenty of both. If Botany Pond is small and you’re feeding them, that may change the equation.

  9. Unlike Canadians, Cananda geese are miserable, aggressive, hissing poop machines. I would avoid them because being attacked by geese isn’t too fun.

    1. They’re noxious pests in urban and suburban environments. That’s because we lure them in with manicured grassy parks and golf courses, where they love to feed. Whose fault is that? In their natural environment, like here on Aubrey Spring Ranch, they’re at home and very shy of people.

      Mallards are dabblers. Canada Geese are grazers. They don’t compete for the same food resource.

      1. I don’t blame the for it, I just avoid them because goose attacks aren’t fun. I would not feed them for fear of making them even more aggressive.

  10. We have geese on our pond, you should avoid them if at all possible as they have none of the endearing qualities of ducks

  11. I love the appreciation certificate. Maybe my children would make me one since Mother’s Day is just around the corner.

  12. Take heed to comments & comments in #s 13 & 14. If you start feeding the geese, you’re at great risk that your legacy will end “… and who brought the Canada Geese to Botany Pond.”

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