I returned to Central Park's Boat Lake last night and was   pleasantly surprised to see that all four of the new goslings from two sets of   parents are still thriving. 
The two families stay close together all the time   (likely because the mama geese are related) and the one lone gosling is   beginning to interact with the three from the other family. 
Though all the babies are strongly imprinted to their own   parents, it is good to realize that the gosling without siblings will not grow   up wanting.
Since family and group bonds are so important in geese, it is   vital for little ones to grow up with a sense of siblings and/or geese within   his/her own age group -- perhaps even a more compelling reason for the parents   of the one gosling to remain close to the parents of three. Geese are extremely   sensitive and responsive to the needs of their little ones, and those   appear to include emotional as well as physical needs. 
In other good news, it has been recently reported that New   York City's Canada geese will not be subjected this year to brutal and   cruel "culls" at the bloody hands of USDA Wildlife Services   as they have been for at least, the last nine or ten years.     
One suspects that this news comes on the heels of recent bird   counts that show the number of resident Canada geese in New York City to be low   and inconsequential -- in other words, not enough of the birds to   warrant round up and slaughter efforts. 
Since New York is a big hunting state (and geese are a popular   target bringing in revenue to state coffers) it would be counterproductive to   hunting purposes to kill all the geese of NYC, most of whom leave the city after   summer's end. Even the parents with goslings leave the safety of Central Park as   soon as the babies are grown and ready to fly (usually at eleven   weeks.)
Speaking of "grown and ready to fly," the three Reservoir   goslings are about halfway there now. At six weeks of age, the babies are now   developing tails, feathers and are nearly half the size of their parents. They   are also mimicking and demonstrating some of the behavior of their parents   (especially daddy) in sometimes chasing off pesky mallards or even another goose   who wanders too close to the family. 
There are in fact more geese now at the Reservoir than when   the goslings first hatched. At least a couple of dozen of new geese have flown   in during the past few weeks as the watercourse represents a safe habitat in   which to go through the annual six week molting period (the time when the   geese lose old flight feathers and replace with new ones). It is during this   time, that all the geese are unable to fly. It is also the period when geese are   particularly vulnerable to "culls" -- though at least in NYC this year, that   won't be the case. 
Among the geese staying at the Reservoir through the molt this   year are a number of juveniles whom I suspect are the offspring of Hansel, Greta   and John and Mary from past years. There are also some old favorites, like the   gander with white "eyebrows" who seemingly calls most of the shots among the   temporary visitors. 
Come the end of summer, however, all of the geese will be gone   -- including Hansel, Greta and their new babies.
When the call of the wild beckons and their wings   can take them, they go.  -- PCA
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