pintail duck

Ducky, It's Cold Outside!

It has been really cold in New York since Christmas, and I've been going down to the 59th Street Pond to feed Woody and his buddies as the ice takes up more of their habitat, plus checking out the ducks and other waterfowl at the Reservoir in Central Park, and at the beaches at Pelham Bay Park in the Bronx, Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn and Great Kills on Staten Island. These birds seem so resilient in the freezing cold (although I have seen casualties, often the result of a duck or cormorant trying to land on the ice and breaking a leg).

Woody Wood Duck, Jan. 9, 2018, the Pond

Woody Wood Duck, Jan. 9, 2018, the Pond

Northern pintail and mallards, the Pond, Jan. 9

Northern pintail and mallards, the Pond, Jan. 9

I put together a video homage to the ducks, geese, gulls and other water birds I've seen during the cold weather. I call it Cold Ducks!!! and it's set to music by Debussy. It features hooded mergansers, ruddy ducks (including the only time I've seen one try to run on ice), a common loon, ring-billed gulls, buffleheads, greater scaup, herring gulls, Canada geese, wood ducks (Woody and his buddies at 59th Street, plus two at the Reservoir), long-tailed ducks (the first I've ever seen — a video of them to come soon!), ring-necked ducks (my second-favorite duck), mallards, northern pintail (Pinny), American coot, American black ducks, northern shovelers, great black-backed gulls, brant and red-breasted mergansers.

Below you can find a photo gallery of some of the cold ducks and other freezing birdies.

Hooded merganser on the Reservoir, Jan. 2

Hooded merganser on the Reservoir, Jan. 2

Northern pintail (Pinny) at the Pond, Jan. 9

Northern pintail (Pinny) at the Pond, Jan. 9

Ring-necked duck on the Reservoir, Jan. 9

Ring-necked duck on the Reservoir, Jan. 9

Ring-billed gull, Floyd Bennett Field, Jan. 10

Ring-billed gull, Floyd Bennett Field, Jan. 10

The photos below were taken Dec. 27 and 28, 2017, and Jan. 2, 3, 9 and 10, 2018: Canada geese, long-tailed duck, hooded merganser (female), wood duck (Woody's nephew), wood duck (back, at Reservoir), male and female ring-necked ducks, black ducks, great black-backed gulls, northern pintail, herring gulls, American coot (you can really see those great "fern feet"), red-breasted merganser, more black-backed gulls.

Pinny Grows Up

I saw Pinny tonight at the Pond. He's a young northern pintail drake who has been hanging around the Pond most days since the beginning of December. Before that, there was a young pintail at the Pool (uptown in Central Park), probably the same duck. I posted a blog about this pintail on Nov. 24, Hey Lady, I'm Not a Mallard! (At first I said the duck was a female, then backpedaled rapidly when I found out otherwise.)

We have been thrilled to watch our Pinny (so much easier than saying young northern pintail drake each time) transition from his "baby feathers" to his adult magnificence. He is a duck with a lot of personality.

Pinny with his pintail, the Pond, Central Park, Feb. 18, 2017

Pinny with his pintail, the Pond, Central Park, Feb. 18, 2017

My Pinny Grows Up video is the result of three months of filming, and shows Pinny from Nov. 24, 2016, through March 17, 2017. It is set to music by Beethoven, the Trio in E Flat Major, Op. 38, performed by Paul Pitman and obtained from MusOpen.org, a royalty-free music source.

This group of photos shows the transition from youngster to adult with adult feathers. The pintail appeared in February, and is very visible in the fourth photo.

Dec. 7, 2016

Dec. 7, 2016

Dec. 28, 2016

Dec. 28, 2016

Jan. 17, 2017

Jan. 17, 2017

March 17, 2017

March 17, 2017

The following photos follow Pinny from Dec. 21, 2016, through March 17, 2017.