Saturday 29 January 2011

Mallard Ducks



Mallard Ducks (Mallard Anas)
Anas is Latin for duck and derives from Greek meaning broad billed.
The mallard duck is the most common wildfowl in the world and is familiar to most people.   Many hybrid and domestic ducks originated with the mallard as can be seen in the upturned tail feathers that appear as two curls and varieties of iridescent plumage.  Even so, both male and female are very attractive ducks.
 The male, the drake, has a distinctive metallic shimmering iridescent green head and neck with a white band around the base of the neck.   The back is grey and the under parts pale grey while the tail feathers are white with two up turned black curls.  The wings are grey/brown with a purple/blue band between bars of white and black.  The drake has a greenish yellow broad beak. The eye is black. Legs and feet are orange/yellow.
The female, is describes as mottled brown but this rather understates how attractive it is.  Generally they have a brown crown with a lighter bar above the eye like an eyebrow and with a dark stripe running back from a black eye.  They have brown wings with purple between white bands.  The tail feathers are white and the bill is olive-brown with mottled orange-yellow around the edges.  The legs and feet are orange.
They mate from January onwards.  Indeed I have been watching them pair up for a few weeks now.  Mating behaviour consists of both bobbing there heads up and down before a very quick mating.  Afterwards, like every true lady, she takes a bath. 
They lay anything from 8 to 16 eggs from around April and the female alone broods them.  The male takes no further part in the care of the chicks although there have been exceptions to that.  Notably, last year, Smudge (a small white hybrid mallard with a black smudge on her head), and her mate both took care of their four ducklings for a few weeks before they were abandoned.  Smudge eventually, took over another female’s brood – you can see that story on Squidoo at... 
There are many more males than females.  Early in the breeding season, other males will be chased off by both the male and female but later several males forcing themselves on a lone female is common.  In these circumstances you can see the female take flight afterwards in what is know as the rape flight.
There is quite a wide variety of colourings among the females.  Along my stretch of the Leeds to Liverpool canal, for example, I am following the fortunes of several distinct females that I hope to identify more closely.
 Last year (2010) when I first developed my interest in the breeding females and their ducklings some were easily identified.  In particularly, one light coloured, almost golden, female I dubbed, Mama Mallard as means of identification.  Mama Mallard had a brood of fifteen (15) chicks that were slowly whittled down to five (5) who survived into adulthood.  Of these five, one was completely yellow (now The Little White Duck), two were pale like her, probably females and two dark, probably males.   I am especially interested to see how these fair this year.
This year it is my intention to try to identify the females early on.  I am not sure, but I suspect that apart from differences in colouring, the markings on the bills may be distinctive.
So far I have identified...
Female 1: Mama Mallard is once again with a mate.  She is a golden brown colour, much lighter than an ordinary mallard female. 

Female 2:  Smudge – a hybrid mallard duck who is completely white except for a single dark smudge on the top of her head.  She also has a mate.

Female 3: Her head is completely brown, lacking the paler ‘eyebrow’.  She really is quite an exquisite bird as you can see here and she has a devoted mate.


Introducing you to the Coppice Pond: St Ives Estate Bingley


We had a light dusting of snow overnight but this morning (Friday) the sun came out.  It was a beautiful day: sun shining on snow, so perfect for a visit to St Ives.  St Ives is a huge estate just outside Bingley that is now open to the public.  Needless to say my favourite place is a lake known as Coppice Pond. 















It is home to a resident flock of noisy Canada geese.  The geese are managed by a ranger so any eggs laid are coated with petrolium jelly to prevent them from hatching.  These are the same Canada geese that pay us visits down at Micklethwaite Wharf and last year one pair mated and nested at Greenhill and they produced seven goslings who all survived.  I had great fun watching them getting flight lessons on the Greenhill.  Hopefully we will get more this year.


There is also this interesting little family. 
Two large white domestic ducks make their home there, both males I think and last year one mated with a female mallard and produced this fella.  I'm pretty sure the hybrid is a male because of the green sploches on his head but I could be wrong.  If I don't know something I feel quite justified in making it up :0) I'm no expert after all and will never claim to be.  I am fascinated by bird behaviour and these four stick very closely together.  I think the female will probably mate again this year judging by her behaviour.







It is always a joy to watch and listen to the coots - I just love those huge feet
 


The Coppice pond also has moorhens plus I saw a couple of male gooseanders but not close enough to photograph. 

The feeding station for woodland birds had a delightful colony of grey squirrels.  Unfortunately they were chased away by blooming dogs let loose by careless owners.  I saw loads of robins, some chaffinches and blackbirds and various tits.  I didn't stay there long as Big Bertha, my Sigma 50-500mm lens, was playing up and I was sulking at having to use the little lens.  I have yet to take a decent photo with the big lens but ONE day I will master it!  Watch this space. 






Thursday 27 January 2011

Water off a duck's back? Too Right!





Introducing my stretch of the Leeds to Liverpool canal

My Canal Landmarks
This is my home turf and this is where I do most of my photography.  I chose it because this seems to be the territory of the mating swans and ducks, they tend to move back and forward between the Five Rise Locks and Lingfield Wharf.  To make it easier later on I thought I would point out some significant landmarks for you.  All these refer to landmarks on the north bank, the opposite bank to the tow path.
The canal is the Leeds to Liverpool canal and my bit stretches from the outskirts of Bingley to the swing bridge at Lingfield Wharf.  The stretch I call home is less than two miles long and begins at the top of the Five Rise Locks at Bingley.  Walking away from Bingley, above the locks is the cafe where the wildfowl know they will find a ready supply of food during the summer months.  Indeed the owner of the cafe has been known to supply stale bread and cakes for visitors to feed them.
Next comes some barge moorings and the bottom of house gardens.  There is a small wooden pier, more boat moorings and then the boat yard.   Next door is  the Airedale Boat Club then more boat moorings, some of them permanent homes.  Grumps the mute swan is not averse to waking up the residents with a tap on the window to be fed.  This area is where the three Swedish ducks are most often found.
The end of the moorings is marked by twisted barb wire and opens up to the green field site known as Greenhill.  At the beginning of this stretch is an old hawthorn tree, and down to the canal side, tunnocks provide good cover for young moorhens. Greenhill stretch up away from the canal and is home to a flock of domestic geese, now wild.  They are mainly white Embden geese, brown Toulous geese, a greylag goose and various hybrid offspring.  There are about 40 permanent residents, the origins of whom were escapees from nearby allotments.    
This section goes from the end of the boat moorings to the swing bridge at Micklethwaite Wharf and includes a curve shallow area that at one time was a turning point for canal boats.  There is a lot of discarded rubble and concrete here from the time when there were landings for the mills here. 
On the other side of the swing bridge, the old Airedale Mills have been converted into homes, mainly flats, with small grassed gardens that are favourites of the Canada geese for grazing.  The end of the accommodations is marked by more old concrete landings, the bottom of the bramble field and various bushes and low trees. 
Next to that is what I call the reeds. This is a lush grass and reed area that has beautiful water lilies and wild irises in summer.
Next is the allotments and then a wooded area, a narrow stripe, a small coppice, with a steep bank leading up to a green field where some of the geese like to graze.  This wooded area had a lot of branches over-hanging the canal making it ideal cover for wildlife.
This ends where there is a concrete weir, the edge of the canal has a concrete shelve that drops down into a culvert for runoff. 
After that is a grassy bank, part of a garden for the house at Lingcroft Wharf and then there is the swing bridge over the road to East Morton.
So, for the purposes of my observations and photography along my stretch of the canal these are the landmarks I will refer to along our journey:
Five Rise Locks (includes the top of the locks, the cafe and the first boat moorings.)
The pier
The boat yard
The boat club
The barges
Greenhill and Micklethwaite wharf
Airedale mills
The bramble field
The reed bed
The allotments
The coppice
The weir
Lingcroft garden
Lingcroft wharf
Here is a VERY rough map that isn't even remotely in scale but should give you some idea of the lay of the land.

CORRECTION: Lingfield should read Lingcroft


  
 

Wednesday 26 January 2011

Welcome to my new blog: Watching Bingley Birds

As you will gather, I am a keen birdwatching and photographer.  I prefer water birds and am lucky enough to live near the Leeds to Liverpool canal, near Bingley in West Yorkshire, England. 

This year I plan to document in words and photographs the wonderful array of birds in this part of the world.  I am particularly interested in bird behaviour so I hope I can capture the essense of what makes these creatures tick.

To start I need to introduce you to my neighbourhood.  There are three main areas I tend to go to most around here:

The Leeds to Liverpool canal at the bottom of my road - this is a stretch less than two miles long but teeming with life.  For me it starts at the top of the Five Rise Locks at Bingley.  This is a series of locks that raise and lower barges and canal boats.  Yorkshire is hilly - and the canal was a major feat of engineering in tackling how to get these heavy industrial boats up and down the hills.  You can read more about the canal in my lens on Squidoo -  Walking the Towpath
This stretch of canal is the most important for me but I do visit other stretches of the canal so will include sightings along there from time to time.

Coppice Pond on the St Ives Estate, Bingley - this is a large estate near Bingley that is now open to the public.  On part of it is the Coppice Pond, home to a large flock of Canada geese as well as coots, moorhens and so on.  The ranger has set up a feeding station for woodland birds so I often go up to watch them and the squirrels.

Myrtle Park in the centre of Bingley - this public park has the Aire River running through it.  So far I haven't studied the wildlife there much but mean to rectify that this year.



I spend most of my time at the canal.  Last year I was lucky enough to follow several wildfowl families through the breeding season with all the ups and downs that entailed.  I produced several small photobooks of their stories on Blurb.com and make several lenses on Squidoo.  This year, I mean to do even better and this blog is the start.  Part of it will be a diary in words and pictures, and part will be articles on the various birds I come across.  I may even throw in a little history now and then!

You can find the complete list of my storybook photography lenses that cover last year's stories of my favourite wildfowl families CLICK HERE - on Squidoo