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Photo:  Mama and Papa at Boat Lake.  But, can Mama  still fly?)    
The heat is on.
 
Following one of the warmest winters ever in New York City with only 4  inches of snow and little rain, we are similarly on our way to one of the  warmest springs ever with typical temperatures averaging 10 to 20  degrees above normal.
 
Should this tendency continue, one hates to imagine what the summer  will be like.   New York City summers are generally miserable with  high humidity and heat, making it typically feel like a concrete  and cement sauna during the months of July and August.
 
What is most concerning however, are the near drought conditions.
 
A few nights ago, there was a fire in Central Park.  The fire occurred  in the composting area near 106th Street and Fifth Avenue.
 
I don't recall a fire ever occurring in Central Park and I have lived in  NYC all my life.
 
Fortunately, the NYC Fire Department was fast on the job and the park  emerged from the fire fairly unscathed with just a few trees lost.
 
Reservoir levels also appear to be very low in Central  Park.  Although the Jackie Onassis Reservoir does not provide water for the  city, it is concerning to see water levels so low as to almost see the base of  the Reservoir in some areas.  Garbage (plastic bottles, bags and other  debris) strewn among the banks suggest things washing up that were probably  tossed or blown in the Reservoir years or even decades ago.
 
Nevertheless, despite the strange anomalies, nature appears to be  adapting to most of the changes.
 
Mallards routinely fly around the park these days and romantic pairs  are sometimes seen strolling or grazing upon grassy park lawns  (something not normally seen in winter).  Geese too, move around more in  spring than other times of the year.
 
In fact, a few nights ago, Papa goose took a flying tour around the Boat  Lake.
 
But, it was odd that Mama was not flying with him.
 
At first I was disquieted when arriving to the Boat Lake and finding  only one of the geese sitting atop the "safety" rock in the middle of  the lake.
 
From a distance, I could not initially be sure which goose it was.
 
But, after a few minutes of careful observation, I figured the goose was  Mama.
 
But, where was Papa?   I could not see him anywhere! 
 
Usually when seeing me, the two geese leave from wherever they are to come  and greet me.
 
But, although Mama saw me, she made no motions to come my way.  She  simply continued to pearch on the rock, as if waiting for something --  or sitting on a nest.  
 
A part of me wondered if Mama was indeed nesting on the rock and  Papa was somewhere a short distance away guarding?   Indeed, only when  nesting have these two geese ever been apart in my observations of them  over the past two years.
 
But, this didn't make sense in view of both the late date and the  location.  Mama and Papa always returned to Turtle Pond when planning to  nest in the past.
 
When my concern began to rise to a state of alarm, there was  suddenly the sound of loud honking coming from the sky above me and I  looked up to see one goose flying in a circle around the lake.
 
Was it Papa?
 
The goose made a couple of lazy circles and then came skidding across the  water in the direction of the rock where Mama stretched out her neck to honk  and greet.
 
It was obviously Papa. 
 
He climbed the rock where his mate dutifully waited for and welcomed  him.
 
And following their greetings, both geese looked across the lake to where I  stood on another rock.
 
Papa flapped his wings and loudly honked.   And immediately, both  geese left the safety rock to come swimming in my direction.
 
As usual, Papa "guarded" while I fed some treats to Mama. Only when Mama  was finished and started to walk away, did Papa move forward to grab a couple of  seeds for himself.
 
Finally, both geese left, (by then under the moonlight) to return to the  safety of their "home" on the safety rock.
 
But, the strange events of the evening made me wonder about Mama's  abilities to still fly?
 
I have not seen Mama goose fly at all since the spring of last  year.
 
I shot a video of Mama and Papa flying together at Turtle Pond last April.  
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_GJ_2njB44     And obviously, the pair flew to the Boat Lake later in the spring or early  summer of last year.
 
But, since that time, I am not aware of the mated pair leaving  the Boat Lake or seen Mama fly at all.
 
While Mama's wings don't appear to be broken or injured, the feathers on  them are more frayed and somewhat disheveled than those on Papa.
 
Mama sustained some type of injury on her right foot from last  year that resulted in half the webbing disappearing.    Did  something happen to her wings as well?
 
I cannot be sure of the answers to these questions.   Indeed, I  am not sure if Mama cannot fly.
 
Perhaps Papa just went off on a brief joy fly the other day and left the  little lady safely at home?
 
I don't know if that is typical behavior for ganders with mates who are  or aren't nesting.   If it is, its something I have not seen  before.
 
What was interesting during that scenario, is that during the time  Papa was flying around, Mama would not leave the safety of the rock -- even for  me.
 
Rather, she patiently waited for Papa to return and then both  geese came to me.
 
Last night, I returned to the Boat Lake, but this time both geese were  together grazing along one of the embankments.
 
Upon recognizing me, Mama and Papa once again came my way.  But,  it was clear that both geese had eaten well for the day.   Mama only  ate a small amount (mostly to placate me) and Papa did not eat at all.
 
And then both geese bade their "goodnights" and swam away romantically  under the moonlight to return to their rock home.
 
But, can Mama still fly?
 
That is the question.
 
And its one I probably won't have a quick or easy answer to anymore than  the question of what the upcoming summer is going to be like in NYC.
 
One thing is relatively clear though:
 
Mama and Papa won't be having new babies this year.  
 
I wonder in fact, if any geese in NYC will be allowed to have new babies  this spring?  
 
Little if anything about this past year seems "normal."  -- PCA
 
 
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