(Photos: 1-- Bottoms up geese putting on show!  2-- Diving geese  coming to land and joining Buster and crew. 3-- Brad, calculating winter  strategy)
"Baby, its cold outside!"
This morning, the temperature in NYC plummeted to 23 degrees.  
Last night, when visiting my feathered friends at Harlem Meer, it was  hovering around the freezing point.
The promise of winter brings necessary changes to the ducks and  geese.  In some cases, those changes involve making deals and  forging alliances for the sheer sake of survival.
The first thing noticed when arriving to the Meer last night was that many  of the geese observed the previous evening had apparently moved on.
Perhaps some of the geese had been migratory and had only stopped  briefly at the Meer. 
Others (i.e. former resident geese) had returned to seemingly mark the  one year anniversary of harassment and to announce to the world that they  had prevailed despite everything!
In any case, Buster and his 6 followers were still at the Meer, as was  the diving family of four.
All eleven geese followed in the water when I arrived with my two  dogs.
However, when Buster and his crew climbed the embankment in familiar  greeting, as well as some of the mallards, I noticed that Brad, my special  domestic duck, was missing!
Not to immediately panic, I figured that Brad was somewhere on the lake and  perhaps unaware that I had shown up a little earlier than usual.    Either he would catch up a little later or I would have to go and look for  him.
For the moment, however, Buster was standing in front of me soliciting  treat as were his rag-tag band of followers and the mallards.
Meanwhile, all four of the "diving family" were heads down and butts up in  the water!
Was this some kind of show they were putting on for my benefit?
I had to chuckle. 
After tossing seeds to the hungry eyes before me, I attempted to snap a  photo of all four butts in the air, but only succeeded in getting two in the  same frame.
Ah, that they would only move a little closer together!  
(Perhaps I can elicit the services of Steven Spielberg to aid in the "training" and film recording of a family of diving  geese?)
After performing their perfectly synchronized routine for a good  ten minutes, the family of four ascended the grassy embankment in seeming search  for "payment."
I fully expected Buster to viciously go after them, but surprisingly  he didn't.
Rather, as long as the divers respectfully allowed reasonable distance  between the two gaggles, Buster appeared willing to accept and let them  stay!
What was going on?
I wondered if perhaps Buster has some secret wish to learn how to  dive?   Lord knows, he seems proficient in just about everything else.  -- Especially, ruling all the other geese with a seemingly iron wing!
But, as all eleven geese peacefully nibbled seeds from the ground along  with the mallards, my mind went back to the still missing Brad.
Where is that damned duck anyway that he hasn't shown up in all this  time?
Careful to save some remaining seed, I gathered my dogs, explained to  Buster and the others that I had to go and seek Brad and set off on a  journey around the lake.
Buster looked up briefly from his grazing as if to say, "Not to  worry.  Brad's around. Just saw him a while ago......Go on.  You'll  find the wretch!"
Sure enough, I did find Brad on the east side of the lake, strategically  swimming with Piggly and Wiggly!
I say, "strategically," because I know Brad to be a very smart and  calculating duck based on history and last year's postings in this  blog.
Just prior to last winter, Brad smartly figured out that he needed to  befriend, Joey, a flightless, Pekin duck to aid him and Angelina in keeping open  water at the otherwise frozen lake. And, it seems he is doing the same thing again!  --  Befriending two other domestic and presumably flightless ducks at  the Meer.
"Ah, OK, Brad, I know the game now!  You are grooming Piggy and  Wiggly to be your combatants against the evils and harshness of  winter.  Smart move!"
Unfortunately, Piggly and Wiggly are not the most robust ducks at Harlem  Meer.   I had personally been feeding Joey for almost a year before  Brad took (up to that point, the very hated) Joey under wing. Joey  was a very large and plump Pekin duck. Piggly and Wiggly, by  contrast, haven't been at the Meer that long and are kind of scrawny Kacki  Campbell ducks. (I am guessing the "breed.")
Nevertheless, Brad has seemingly "calculated" that too.   Upon  seeing me, Brad led his two new charges to follow me back to the feeding  station.
Brad apparently will see to it that Piggly and Wiggly get fattened up  before the real challenges of winter set in.
And so, it seems in the waterfowl world (like in the human world) deals are  made and one wing washes the other.   The "deal" between Brad and  the lowly Piggly and Wiggly seems to be, "I will protect you from the  mallards and help you to find food.  But, you will have to work your butts  off to maintain open water here over the next two months!"
For their part, Piggly and Wiggly have no choice but to go along with that  deal.  It is in fact, the only way they can survive Harlem Meer over the  winter.
Returning to the feeding station, Buster, his crew and their new found  "buddies" were still sharing tidbits from the ground.  Meanwhile, Brad and  his new charges took their positions as I hand fed Brad and tossed remaining  seeds to Piggly and Wiggly.
For the few minutes I removed my gloves to hand-feed Brad, my hands became  frozen, reminding all, that winter is now less than a week away.
And yes, alliances are formed and deals made, both among the geese and the  ducks.
Whatever it takes to get them through the long, dark and merciless days of  January and February in New York City.
For it is only in the strength of numbers and mutual cooperation that  geese and ducks can ultimately succeed in breaking the stranglehold of  winter's grip on frozen waters and work to "de-ice" both, their relationships  and the watercourses themselves.
I don't know if Buster, in fact, has "secret wishes" to learn how to dive  as the family of four "bottoms up" geese.  But, he knows there is  strength in numbers, whether that strength be in eventual migration  together or working simply to maintain open water.  For their part,  the divers seem to recognize Buster as a "leader" as do the other six geese who  have previously latched on to Buster.
And meanwhile, Brad has been through this movie before.  And though  over the past year, he lost, both Joey and his beloved Angelina, mysterious  circumstances have seemingly "provided" for him once again to get  through winter "with a little help from his friends."
If politics sometimes makes strange bedfellows among humans, imagine what  winter makes for our feathered and other friends of nature?  
Winter's Alliances.  
They may seem strange and mysterious, but they assuredly have  purpose.  -- PCA
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