It appears that the bonded pair of mallards at Botany Pond are here for the long term. Every morning they are waiting at the same spot for their breakfast, and in the afternoon they snooze on the rocks but swim to me for their late lunch when I whistle. Further, I saw two of our five red-eared slider turtles yesterday, swimming and sunning in the warmer weather. Here are a few photos and a video at bottom.
It seems that the ducks are residents now, and so it’s time to name them. As with last year, they appeared on the Jewish holiday of Purim and thus needed Jewish, Purim-related names. My friend Peggy Mason, co-duck-tender, scoured the Purim literature to give the ducks names (we don’t name them until we’re sure they’re going to hang around). The hen (not Esther, as I ascertained from photos published previously), is now called Vashti, named after a character in the Purim story:
Vashti (Hebrew: וַשְׁתִּי, romanized: Vaštī; Koine Greek: Ἀστίν, romanized: Astín; Modern Persian: وشتی, romanized: Vâšti) was a queen of Persia and the first wife of Persian king Ahasuerus in the Book of Esther, a book included within the Tanakh and the Old Testament which is read on the Jewish holiday of Purim. She was either executed or banished for her refusal to appear at the king’s banquet to show her beauty as Ahasuerus wished, and was succeeded as queen by Esther, a Jew. That refusal might be better understood via the Jewish tradition that she was ordered to appear naked. In the Midrash, Vashti is described as beautiful but wicked and vain; she is viewed as an independent-minded heroine in feminist theological interpretations of the Purim story.
That seems fairly appropriate given that there’s no other woman in the story save the heroine Esther, who saved the Jews.
A name for the drake was tougher, as the only other notable male in the Purim story is the wicked Haman, who tried to get the King to exterminate the Jews (Esther foiled that plot). And we can’t have a drake named after a genocidal maniac. Scouring the story and remembering her Hebrew, Peggy suggested the name Armon, which means “palace” or “fortress” in Hebrew. That’s where the whole Purim story took place. Fortunately, it’s also a Jewish man’s name, and short.
Ergo the hen and drake are now Vashti and Armon, respectively. I’ll have to do some explaining when visitors ask me the ducks’ names and how they got them. But it is cool that last year’s and this year’s ducks both arrived on Purim, though the holidays are two weeks displaced from 2025 to 2026.
Click the pictures below if you want to enlarge them.
Aaaaaand. . . here’s the pair together. I think they make quite the handsome couple:
The lovely Vashti, hopefully destined to produce this year’s brood of ducklings. Here she’s preening, sunning, and sleeping in the warm sun of Sunday:
And the regal Armon, swimming and napping:
We put five large red-eared slider turtles (Trachemys scripta elegans) into the pond last fall, and hoped they’d hibernate in custom turtle houses put on the pebble-y bottom. Apparently they did, as we’ve seen no bodies floating on the water. (These were five turtles saved and put in a southern Illinois pond when Botany Pond was renovated several years ago. I believe five more evacuees will come home again this Spring.)
It’s been too cold for them to show up, but yesterday I found a big one blithely sunning himself on a rock, stretching out his limbs to get the sun. (Turtles’ heads and legs are their solar panels, used to warm up the body.) Later I saw another one’s head above the water surface as it was swimming around. So we know we have at least two. Here’s the sunbather:
This is near the northern limit of the species’ distribution, as the eggs can’t survive very cold winters.
So we have our turtles and ducks: all is in place for a lovely Spring and Summer.
And a lousy movie of Armon and Vashti preening themselves after having lunch:
More good news: I’m told the duck camera, which has been re-installed, will be activated this week. Stay tuned for the link!










Spring has arrived at Botany Pond. Looking forward to the upcoming duck family photos.
Good news!
I wonder what the turtles will eat, now that the pond is renovated.
One of the facilities officials is supposed to feed them frozen smelt, and I also have a big bag of fancy turtle pellets to give them.
How nice! I was inspired to actually read about the story of Purim. I can see why finding Purim-related names is tough. You’re going to be in real trouble if next-year’s ducks also arrive around the time of the holiday. I guess you could name the drake after the King, but Ahasuerus doesn’t exactly trip off the tongue.
There was a singer in the 60s who was also named Vashti. She sort of dropped off the map, but she had some lovely songs.
Instead of Ahasuerus, you can call him by his more familiar name: Xerxes.
Glad to see the harbingers of spring showing up and taking residence. Any chance of a wide angle pic of the pond, as we mostly have seen closeups? Would be good for gaining perspective. Thanks!
Sure; I’ll post one next time. You can also get a wide view when the duckcam goes online (24/7!!)
Naming the ducks reminds me of the great Jim Croce’s (also Jewish, z”ll) beautiful song “I’ve Got a Name.”
A lovely couple, and it’s good to see the turtles emerging as well. The are invasive here in the Pacific Northwest, blotting out our Western Pond Turtle, but I still love them.
What if you speak the name “Haman” near the ducks? Do they screech and scream and splash and flap their wings in order to drown out the sound of his name? That would be the definitive test for whether the ducks are Jewish.
Wonderful news. Beautiful historic names.
Hooray for Vashti, Armon, the turtles and the U of Chicago. Now, when I read a higher ed horror story, I put you, the ducks, the turtles, Chancellor Diermeier and the many fine higher ed faculty and administrators I’ve known on the other end of the seesaw and all of you more than balance the angst those stories create.
The pond looks nice and clean, puts my garden pond to shame. I have newts and I had masses of tadpoles a couple of years ago but a sudden freeze seemed to finish them all off.
I greatly enjoy the Botany pond updates, thanks!
Great that you have ducks and turtles!
Vashti and Armon are lovely!
Welcome, Spring.
Good to see these bonded ducks and the turtles still within their native range.