Forget Dyson or Hoover. 
The best vacuum cleaners are mallards.
It is funny to watch mallards as they quickly dart across the ground and  swoop up any sunflower seeds or other treats present.  They are  extremely fast and proficient.  Within mere seconds everything is gone and  the grass and ground are spotlessly clean.
Were mallards to sweep up dust and dirt the way they do food, it would  be tempting to bring a few home and throw out the expensive vacuum. 
Geese on the other hand, are much slower, relaxed and seemingly  discriminating when grazing on grounds for food.
I have seen geese refuse broccoli, lettuce and small bits of tomato  whereas the ducks readily swoop them up.
Indeed, were survival in nature merely based upon speed and variance  in diet, geese would starve and ducks would overrun the planet.
But, though different, geese and ducks actually coordinate  and harmonize very well together.
Geese are thorough and clever in finding food.  They are capable of  digging deep in the grass, diving under the water and even working in  concert with each other in the winter to wear down snow and find food in  the ground.
Last winter for example,  gaggles of geese spread out on the snow  covered lawns of Harlem Meer in small groups.   Each  group appeared to "work" an area of snow by walking and pressing down with  their huge feet.  When at last, the ground was visible under the snow, the  geese grazed and dug with their beaks to find grass and  other food.   (Some mallards later joined them.)
While most of Central Park was still covered in snow, there were parts of  Harlem Meer lawns that appeared shoveled. Geese are, if nothing else, extremely  patient and tenacious in finding food.  (And in some cases, it seems they  save park workers some shoveling work!)
Geese also possess excellent eyesight (or at least better than 65-year-old  women).
Sometimes when going to the Meer, I initially don't see any geese on the  water.
But, then I suddenly hear goose honks and see Buster and his gaggle  flying across from some eastern part of the lake and zooming on to the  embankment.
Buster can apparently see me from almost a mile away. 
And so, while mallards may possess the speed, quickness and efficiency to  find food even in winter, geese possess patience, tenacity and the ability to  coordinate and work with each other to find it.  This despite the  geese's otherwise slowness and sometimes lazy, pondering ways..
The two types of waterfowl actually work very well together in finding  and maintaining good sources of food, as well as insuring safety.
When lakes and ponds freeze over in winter, the geese (being larger and  heavier than mallards) help to break through thin sheets of ice.    But, once broken through, the mallards (being quicker and more energetic than  geese) are better at keeping the pools of water open.
Since they seem to do more exploratory flying than geese, mallards are  presumably better at finding ponds, lakes and other good locations for  food.  
But, the geese, being ever so wary and vigilant are good  at engendering to the mallards a feeling of safety and  protection.
So much so, that in the summer of 2010,  two mother mallards at Harlem  Meer routinely brought their ducklings at night to rest and sleep near the  family of Canada geese.
As long as the duck families kept a respectable distance (usually  about 5 to 10 feet away) from the goose family, Papa goose didn't mind.
All this is not to say that geese and ducks cannot survive without each  other.
Obviously they can, just as humans could survive without vacuum cleaners,  snow shovels, ice breakers and burglar alarms. 
But, ducks and geese seem to be happier and better off  when they do have each other (despite the occasionally bickering and  territorial disputes). -- Just as we humans are better off with our  convenience tools. -- PCA
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