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When arriving to the Central Park Reservoir shortly after   sunset last night, I noted many new mallards resting along the base of   the rocks. 
"Oh, there must be geese here tonight!" I   thought.
Though mallards and geese don't normally fly together, they do   tend to flock in the same areas and follow similar   migration patterns. 
Sure enough, as I walked a little further north, I   suddenly heard excited honking as a bunch of geese were preparing for take-off   from the Reservoir. 
One by one, different gaggles took off, most composed   from eight to twenty-five geese. Like so many skeins before them, they left   via the invisible flyway in the sky that leads them east towards the direction   of Queens. (Were they to fly south in Manhattan, they would be on potential   collision course with Manhattan skyscrapers.) 
Unlike skeins of migratory geese leaving the Reservoir   throughout October and early parts of November shortly after dawn, these   geese were instead, choosing to take flight at night.  This is   a pattern I have noted over the past several years: Early predecessors   tend to take-off and do most of their flying during daylight hours,   whereas the later migrating geese seem to show preference for night flying.
Could this change have something to do with expanded hunting   seasons that often start in many areas during November?  Could it   be that night flying is safer for later migrating geese?
Since I can't ask the geese the obvious question of why   they change flying patterns according to the calendar, I am left only to note   the behavior change and the fact it is something repeated in observations over   the course of years, not just days. 
Another difference noted over the years is that the spring   goose migration periods appear much shorter in the spring than the fall   (usually lasting only from March through early April). One suspects   that is due to the geese wanting to return early to nesting locations in order   to choose the best spots. 
But during the fall, goose migrations begin as early as   September and continue well into December when at last, the geese (and   ducks) who typically winter at the Central Park Reservoir finally arrive.   
To that point, some of the migratory geese and ducks who   choose the Reservoir as their January and February wintering locations, have   already arrived, but there are many more to come. What we see now are just the   first trickles. 
I suspect that the early migrating geese we typically see in   September and early October are likely from very far north regions, such as the   Sub-Arctic and northern Canada whereas the geese flying in now might be   from northern states such as Maine, Vermont or even upstate New York. Since they   don't have to fly so far, they leave later. But that too, is speculation.    The fact is, there is not a whole lot of information on migratory goose flying   patterns and the actual reasons for wide variations. 
I stayed at the Reservoir for nearly an hour last night   watching nearly all of the geese using the Reservoir as a temporary rest stop,   take-off. Without exception, there was much honking and organization before   actual take-off and it was interesting to note geese still in the water honking   at their colleagues taking off and flying over them as if bidding them   a fond Bon Voyage or promising to meet them at some designated spot.    
I regretted not being able to photograph the geese flying   above me as it was dark and the geese were moving too fast. (Any attempted   photos would have been blurred.)  Such a shame as at least one flock of   about 25 geese had immediately formed the perfect "V" formation that Canada   geese are so famous for.
It was finally interesting to note that though the geese and   mallards seemingly arrived at the Reservoir yesterday around the same   times, the mallards did not depart with their feathered friends.    
When finally leaving the Reservoir, I noted the mallards   still quietly roosting along the base of the rocks.
"Not to worry" I imagine them thinking. "We'll catch up to the   geese later."
Maybe night flying is not just their thing.    
The mallards apparently like their beauty rest.  --   PCA
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