As day is to night or summer is to winter or health is to illness, that was  the marked difference last night at Harlem Meer compared to  the liveliness and "avian celebration" of the Memorial Day  weekend.
Arriving at the Meer shortly after the sun had set last night, there  was an eeriness and almost deathly quiet around the lake.
Only two mallards sat motionless on the south bank of the  watercourse (the place where most of the mallards and geese, when  there, usually gather at night). 
The male and female mallards barely looked up as I passed with my  dogs.  They were not interested in any treats, nor particularly engaged in  anything going on around them.
Not that there was anything happening to get excited or  engaged about.
I sat with my dogs for a while on a nearby park bench trying to make out if  I could see any ducks or geese on the lake.  But, I couldn't.
The lake appeared like a sullen, dark pool of motionless ink with  little signs of life upon it.
Looking again at the seemingly spiritless mallards in front of me, I  wondered to myself if mallards ever get depressed?   If so, I seemed  to be looking at it.
Feeling a sense of deflation myself, I decided to walk around the entire  lake to see if I could find Bozo and Bonnie (or any geese, for  that matter), the mama mallard, "Jillian" (and her four  tiny ducklings) or even Brad and Angelina, the power duck couple of  Harlem Meer.
But, everywhere that my dogs and I walked it was the same thing.
Empty water edges and eerie silence on the water.
Peering out into the darkness, I could barely make out what appeared to be  perhaps a few mallards and even two geese seemingly hiding in the middle of  the lake.
The birds were like statues on the water, barely moving at all.    I wasn't in fact sure I was seeing geese or ducks, but rather, imagining  some sort of mirage.
Having walked around almost the entire Meer, I finally found Brad and  Angelina, the two flightless ducks, quietly huddled on some grass at the east  side of the lake. -- A hidden location I have very rarely seen them in the  past.
They too, seemed unusually quiet and guarded.  As I approached the two  ducks to toss some treats, they carefully retreated as if not knowing or fully  trusting me.
I have rarely seen these two, usually extremely lively and spirited ducks  behave in such skittish, cautious fashion.  -- Especially with me  who Brad and Angelina know for almost two years.
Something was very, very "off" and strange last night at the Meer.   
I suddenly felt I was in the Twilight Zone.
Not wanting to stress them any further, I walked away from  BrAdgelina, but found myself wondering the same thought when seeing the  first two mallards:  Do ducks ever get depressed?   Once  again, I felt I had just looked at it.
Still hoping to see some sign of the mama mallard and her ducklings, I  peered out to the lake once again.
It seemed I could clearly make out this time, what appeared to be two goose  silhouettes in the distance.   They were in the same location in  the middle of the lake, where Bozo and Bonnie usually are.
"Bozo!"  "Is that you, Bozo?"
But, if the two geese were in fact, Bozo and Bonnie and if he saw or heard  me, Bozo made no motions to either come and stalk my dogs or see me.
Instead, he remained very close to his mate, neither goose moving at all on  the water.
And so, like the few ducks or geese I saw, I too felt a sense of  dispiritedness and deflation.
What could have happened between Monday night and last night (Wednesday) to  cause such a seemingly dramatic and foreboding change?
Monday night there were ten lively geese at the lake, along with  almost 25 mallards (including the mama and her four ducklings). Most of the  birds had cheerfully congregated at the south lake bank and were  engaged in all kinds of posturing and oneupsman-ship kind of games.   As described the next day, it was like being at some lively and grand,  "avian party."
But, obviously the party soon ended.
Last night, it was more like some kind of funeral atmosphere than any  "party."
I never in fact, found the mama mallard and ducklings who presumably must  have been hiding in some marshes or high weeds.
And if I saw the footloose and fancy free, Bozo at all, he remained  steadfastly by his mate on the water like he was guarding the crown jewels -- or  afraid that some kind of huge, "Cujo" dog was about to attack them.
 I would like to think or say to myself that the small gaggle of geese  who flew in over the weekend to annoy Bozo or celebrate the holiday weekend,  were "stopovers." -- i.e. Geese on their way to someplace else that stop  briefly at a location to rest or graze.
But, this is not the migratory season and I am quite sure that the geese at  the Meer over the weekend were Central Park "regulars" who are familiar  with both the location and the heavy human traffic at the Meer during the  warm weather.
In fact, I even considered that five of the geese might have been the grown  goslings from Turtle Pond.  Two of them confidently ate from my hand  on Monday night.
Judging however, from the very unusual and guarded, evasive  behavior observed last night  from the few ducks I saw, I could only  equate it to some type of "trauma." 
Like that associated with goose harassment programs.
Apparently, ten geese and a couple of dozen mallards on a large lake were  "too many."  
And, apparently too, the idea is to chase whatever geese are at Central  Park to some more remote location where they will be rounded up and  gassed in a few weeks by the USDA.
As for the few ducks and geese who steadfastly remained on the lake either  due to inability to fly (Brad and Angelina) or simple stubbornness and  resiliency, (Bozo and Bonnie) it was more than apparent that they were trying to  be invisible.
Do mallards (or geese) ever get depressed?
Indeed they do.  
Especially when terrorized or made to feel unwelcomed.  --  PCA
                                                      ***********
 
 

3 comments:
We own a bunch of lovely chickens and, more recently, an adult duck, a baby duck and baby goose.
Our babies were best friends, always hanging around each other. Well, little Ducky got sick and passed away unexpectedly. Goosey is so darn depressed right now and I can't help but
hope that she'll be able to move on.
The same happened with our old rooster, Chiquito. We were taking care of a young doberman, a gift from my sister, and we had hoped it would learn from our older dogs that you don't touch our piultry. As it turns out, he wasn't going to just let the birds be. He ended up killing (and later eating) Chiquito's many hens. Chiquito was always able to dissuade the dog by attacking with his talons or pecking his eyes, but once his hens (who weren't capable of protecting themselves, seeing as they were some heavy broilers that were a little slow because of their weight) were gone, he let the dog get him.
I often wish that people understood more about the nature of birds. Disrupting their lives negatively can be so destructive to their calm dispositions that it's bordering on cruel. I feel horrible that a city would do such a thing to an undeserving community of birds.
I guess I'm lucky that I live in South Texas. With our place on many bird species' migratory map, our community survives on birding, which protects our local birds and migratory birds.
In 1995, and also Licensed by the fact that I call them my cutie pie sissy baby.
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