(Photos: 1-- New goose pair at the Boat Lake.  Though they  came to greet a human offering treats, they spent their time preening on rock,  while turtles enjoyed a "feast."  2-Mama and Papa on different rock  preening and resting.)
Some good news coming out of both, the UK and Lacey, New Jersey the past  couple of days.  Both locations have decided to shelve planned culls of  geese in favor of allowing non-lethal population control  measures sufficient chance to work.   For the latest updates and  news articles on these and other noteworthy events, please go to our  Facebook page:
Closer to home, migratory populations of geese have seemingly all left  Central Park along with most of the mallards who wintered there since December.  
The other day I walked around the Reservoir and Turtle Pond where just a  few ducks were observed and no geese. 
At the Boat Lake in Central Park, it was however, a different story. 
I counted a total of nine geese (ironically, the same number that molted at  the Boat Lake last summer.)    This number includes the Boat Lake  goose family (Mama, Papa and their three youngsters hatched at Turtle Pond in  2010) and two pairs of seemingly "new" geese.
I was a little surprised that the family was still at the Boat Lake as  usually in March, they return to Turtle Pond (the site of nesting and previous  successful gosling raising). 
The fact that the family still hasn't returned to the pond is  bewildering.  I am not sure if this means that Papa and Mama will not  attempt to nest this year (they are after all, a little along in years) or if  they are delaying return for some reason.   Last year, something  happened to the eggs that Mama was sitting on near Belvedere Castle and they  didn't hatch. (The geese are usually also subject to harassment at  Turtle Pond during the spring and late summer and fall.) 
So, the fact the family is still at the Boat Lake leads me to believe  they might attempt to stay there through the summer.  But, whether the  parent geese attempt to nest at the Boat Lake or not seems  questionable.   
Their behavior the other day did not seemingly indicate either an  existing nest or preparation for one. Mama and Papa were mostly  hanging out and preening themselves on the familiar rock in the water where they  usually slept last summer along with the other geese who molted with  them.   Their three youngsters were also on the rock the other  day, but in a lowered position on it (family hierarchy and  rule?)
I had hoped that Mama and Papa might swim to the rock on the other side of  the lake where I usually see them and occasionally offer treat and  take photos. 
But, there were five young guys fishing on that publicly accessed area and  the geese and ducks kept distance from it. 
There were also many people boating the other day due to the beautiful and  unusually warm weather. 
Although the geese are very used to boats, it seemed they opted  more for relaxing and preening than navigating through so much  (perhaps unexpected) human activity so early in the season.  
The other geese on the boat lake were paired off and also mostly resting  and preening. 
A cyclist stopped to sit and rest on another publicly accessed rock.   The man tossed some bits of bread towards one pair of geese in the  water and they then gregariously joined him on the rock. 
But, the geese did not show any interest in the  offered food.  
Instead, they preened themselves, while turtles appeared to grab the small  bits of bread floating in the water. 
In essence, what has been observed at Harlem Meer over the past couple of  weeks is also occurring in other sections of Central Park. 
Migratory populations of geese and ducks have left to return to spring and  summer breeding or molting grounds.  The remaining "resident" geese and  mallards are mostly paired off these days and concerned with  preparations for either breeding or summer molting (all that attention  to preening).  
And with all the new spring blooms and plentiful food  supplies, it seems the last thing the birds are interested in are offered  human treats. 
I wonder if the geese and ducks sometimes say to themselves, "That  only humans were so generous over the winter!"  
Too bad the waterfowl can't "squirrel" away the treats offered during fair  weather for those days in January and February when neither food nor  generous humans are plentiful. 
"Feast or famine" it must seem to them. -- PCA
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