New York City has become a winter wonderland this   season.
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We wonder how much snow and ice is going to be added to that   already on the ground and covering watercourses?
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We wonder if we will experience further "Polar Vortex" with   temperatures plunging to single digits and wind chills below zero?
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And we wonder if this winter will actually come to an   end -- let's say, by June?
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But, most of all, I wonder where exactly the geese,   ducks and other water birds go when the watercourses they normally winter on   transform into frozen sheets of ice?
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The latter is a question that has vexed my consciousness for   some weeks now -- especially noting all the times the wintering Canada   geese (who normally spend January and most of February hunkered   down at the Jackie Onassis Reservoir in Central Park) have suddenly had to   pack up and leave.
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There is little question that the geese seem to "know" or   sense when matters are about to quickly go to hell weather-wise at least a   day or two before they actually do. They generally fly out from the Reservoir   while conditions are still reasonably mild and favorable. 
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But where the geese (and other water birds) go for   "shelter" from the type of storms we've been having all along the east coast   (and even the south) is anyone's guess.
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Even large parts of the Hudson River have iced over causing   the Coast Guard to work overtime with ice cutters trying to create passage for   ships and boats. 
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This past "Superbowl" weekend, the weather temporarily warmed   up in New York City to balmy 40's and even 50's degree   temperatures.  
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Geese began to trickle back to the Reservoir and by Sunday   afternoon, most if not all of the roughly 300 wintering geese had   cautiously settled down once more.
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But, no sooner had the geese returned when they began to   organize themselves once again for take-off. 
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I spent at least an hour just after the sun had gone down   Sunday, listening to loud, excitable and constant honking amongst the many   gaggles of geese on the semi-frozen water.  That kind of "chatter" and   communication was sure sign that the geese were quickly gathering to   soon fly out. 
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Sure enough, one by one, the geese began to take off in their   perfectly timed and highly organized flocks like airliners taking off from a   runway.
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Usually the flying skeins consisted of 7 to 15 geese,    But, a few were as small as two geese or as many as 25,
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Many flocks stopped briefly at the North Meadow in   Central Park  -- perhaps to graze a little --before taking flight again.   
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But, where the geese ultimately went, I have no idea.   
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I just know they left Central Park. 
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Noting the brief return and departure of the Central Park   wintering geese, it was not too surprising Sunday evening to go to Harlem   Meer and discover that Bandy was gone.  The "loner" and banded Canada   goose was seemingly left behind when her flock was presumably harassed out   of the Meer by Geese Police a couple of weeks ago. 
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I had been speculating all along that Bandy was waiting at the   Meer for her family (or flock) to return and as soon as they did, she would   rejoin them. 
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I don't know for fact that actually occurred, but I am   guessing -- and hoping that it did.
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It is usually not a bright future for a Canada goose without   a family or flock.
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That we have had so many "loner" geese in Central Park over   the past few years is seeming testament to human destruction and never ending   harassment of these wondrous and courageous birds. 
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Watching how deliberately and meticulously geese usually take   off when flying on their own, it is more than apparent that when harassed, geese   are forced to take flight in disorganized and even panicked fashion and   this can often result in a goose being left behind (usually a younger   goose). 
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Hopefully, the geese can later reunite as is hopefully what   occurred in Bandy's case. 
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But, if the geese are migratory, that might not always be the   case if the flock has simply moved on not to return to a harassment site.   
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Nor can a reunion occur if the loner goose's mate or family   has been wiped out. It is suspected that this occurred to Cago   last summer when the loner female goose flew into Harlem Meer in late   June. Having molted later than most geese and still flying in late   June, Cago most likely survived a USDA WS cull that took out all her   other family members. 
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Since late last summer, there has also been a "loner"   goose at the Boat Lake in Central Park. 
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But, in this case, no reunion with mate or family has   occurred. (Perhaps that is because this site is patrolled every day by Geese   Police and if the goose family returned, they would be immediately harassed   out.)
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My friend, Liliana monitors the goose she calls "Loner"   everyday at the Boat Lake and reports to me.  
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Fortunately, for Loner, there is a mated pair of geese also at   the Boat Lake who apparently are well accustomed to Geese Police and are not   easily harassed out. 
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The mated pair have begrudgingly "accepted" Loner into their   space (as long as he keeps respectable distance), but it is speculated that   arrangement is only temporary because of the   current (non-nesting) seasons. 
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When the gander of the pair wishes to mate again with his   partner (usually in March), he will likely be relentless in kicking Loner   out of the current cozy and convenient arrangement. 
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Loner had better hope that there are some   youthful, unpaired Canada geese that take up residence in the nearby   Reservoir over the spring and summer. And even if that be the case, it   will require many weeks before he might be accepted by them. 
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It is not an easy life for loner geese.  They have to   struggle for acceptance into established flocks and may have to spend many weeks   and months being the "odd goose out" and lowest on totem pole. 
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But, it is essential that all geese (and ducks) have   family and/or flock, (regardless of hierarchal position) as they cannot   ultimately survive for long as "loners." 
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Cago's ultimate broken heart death last October is   seeming proof of that. 
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And this winter, we seem to have also lost "Mister, Mister"   the mallard with broken wing at Harlem Meer. 
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It wasn't the broken wing that ultimately killed Mister as he   had survived with it since the early spring. Nor, was it, I believe,   the frigid weather -- at least directly.
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But, alone on a frozen lake when all the other water birds had   left (or, in the case of geese, been harassed out), Mister ultimately became an   easy and highly visible target for an off leash, predatory dog or   even predatory bird. 
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Whatever the case, I have not seen Mister in well over a month   and am quite sure at this point, he is dead. 
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This is the first winter in the years I (and my friend,   Liliana) have been observing waterfowl in Central Park that we have   knowingly lost a duck or goose.
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But, for sure (especially realizing Mister's demise) had the   four flightless domestic ducks from Harlem Meer and the three domestics   from the Boat Lake not been rescued and responsibly placed this   past November, it is highly unlikely they would have survived a   winter like this on frozen lakes and as easy targets for predators.
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That is the one aspect of this winter, that I don't "wonder"   about at all. -- The wisdom of getting those vulnerable ducks out of Central   Park before the "iceman cometh."
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But for all the wild geese and ducks who DO miraculously   survive, the question of where they go to beat the elements of a particularly   brutal winter throughout most of the country is one of constant wonder.   
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I just know that amongst their ranks are some really bitchin,'   top notch weather forecasters -- or fortune tellers. 
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Something tells me there are few things in life the   geese actually wonder about. 
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They just stoically  pack their gear when the going gets   tough and fly out before the punches. -- PCA
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