Ducks At A Distance

Nice Muscovy Ducks photos

A few nice muscovy ducks images I found:

Muscovy Duck
muscovy ducks

Image by Sergey Yeliseev
Muscovy Duck – Cairina moschata – ????????? ????

Russia, Moscow, Altuf’evskij pond, 11/08/2007

Muscovy Duck
muscovy ducks

Image by kabl1992
Muscovy Duck
Cairina moschata
Essendon, Victoria, Australia

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Cool Ducks Muscovy images

Some cool ducks muscovy images:

Muscovy duck in the park 03
ducks muscovy

Image by autan
Thank you friends, for your immediate and precise information!! I got it well wow it is nice!! This experience is likely to make me interested in fowls. (^O^) After browsing Japanese web sites on this, I knew that this bird often puzzles Japanese as I did haha

… well then,

Bariken/Taiwan-gamo/France-gamo, ????/???/??????Muscovy duck, Cairina moschata

According to Wikpedia … "……. a large duck which is native to Mexico, Central and South America. ……… There also are feral breeding populations in North America in and around public parks in nearly every disorder of the USA and in the Canadian provinces. Although the Muscovy Duck is a tropical bird, it adapts to icy and snowy conditions down to -12°C (10°F) and below without ill things The wild Muscovy Duck is all-dark apart from the white in the wings, with long talons on its feet and a wide flat tail. …Some domesticated ducklings have a dark head and blue eyes, others a set alight auburn crown and dark markings on their nape. They are agile and speedy precocial hunters.

From Japanese web search I also knew that … Introduced to Japan for farming but marketing failed. escaped birds naturalized in many water surface,,,,the only household duck that is not originated in Mallard. ….Japanese name "Bariken" originates from Dutch word "Bergeeende" … so maybe introduced from Netherland? Other Japanese name means "Taiwan duck", "French duck"

Otto muma park, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, japan Feb 2008
Nikon D70s / Sigma 150 macro

Initial discription ———————–
I have small information about birds, and nothing especially on fowls. Someone please teach me what is he!!

I thought this one is some kind of turkey or so (^.^;;, but ahh! it jumped into the pond!! I reckon a turkey does not swim… right? You may laugh at my stone ignorance!! (^O^)

Today I went to Otto-numa park to watch ducks. The sun was warm spring sun, but strong wind was chill north wind. I sit by the pond, and loved watching ducks. I like to watch pin-tails, they are really cute and comical. Swans were swimming elegantly.

There are many feeders and every time someone feeds, there happened quite a mess lol. In front of me a mallard was trying to raxx a white duck (^.^;;

On the bank various kinds of homeless fowls, whom I cannot identify only if it is chicken or not lol, and landed pintails were always making mess following walkers expecting feed. This park, especially in chill is birds wonderland haha.

One after another, fowls came to me, walked about rotating around me, so I did much chat with them haha. "I know you ware nice jacket, but have you ever caught cold? Don’t say you have that bird ful!" "..gobble… gobble"

I suddenly thought that fowl may be much more photogenic than wild birds here on close up, and tried some shots haha.

Its a duck, Muscovy to me and you!
ducks muscovy

Image by grytr
Another Ely Muscovy duck – a childish one

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Muscovy Ducks

Like many New Yorkers, Muscovy ducks are not native to the city but have made a home here.

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Muscovy Duck near the Inn at Otter Crest Canvas Print – Canvas Art

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Muscovy Duck near the Inn at Otter Crest Canvas Print – Canvas Art

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Muscovy and Pekin ducks breeding!?

I saw it with my own eyes this morning when I went to feed them and then later on. But my question is since Ive been reading about the fertility life low when breeding Muscovys with a common duck. Why is that? They have been mating ALL day. I know the ducklings will be mules. She has been laying eggs everyday and the one from yesterday and today I place in the chcikens nest and found them to be missing earlier. They were hiding way down in the bottom of the nest. Is this a clue that she is going to incubate?

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Muscovy Ducks Might Well Intrigue You

Did you know that the Muscovy Duck ‘hisses’ and does not ‘con’?  Extraordinary, that.  One naturally assumes that all ducks con.

 

My uncle and aunt kept a flight of Muscovies on their small farm in Southern Africa to provide themselves with ‘desk birds’ every so often.  They were kept in a pen but the door was often left open and so they ‘grazed’ in the yard around the household.  They gave the impression of life contented birds, breeding easily – hatching out a brood of eight or more ducklings every four months or so.  They genuinely seemed to have no complaints with their lifestyle – it suited them very well.

 

As an aside, this was not so of a flight of ostriches penned up for breeding purposes, which I once saw.  A more miserable, pathetic bunch of birds is hardly imaginable, every bone in their bodies indicating defeat by their enclosed space as they stood limply by the wooden fences staring longingly at the open land outside of their pen. Not a blade of grass existed inside, just bare, hard ground and stones.  Nothing to give them stimulus to delight in their surroundings.

 

Back to the muscovies, from a human point of view, the Muscovy droppings in the yard seemed endless, covering the ground and squelching under your feet as you walked crosswise it.  Treading carefully was not an option, and therein lies my reason for avoiding these ducks, even today.

 

Much research has gone into the origin of the name Muscovy. By the scenery of their name, Russia was the most likely place of origin (though they are, in fact, native to Mexico).  The most widely usual outcome of the research seems to be that the history of their name derives from their distinctive musky odour.  Their family tree has also been shuffled around until the consensus has been reached that they belong to the ‘Shelduck’ – genus Tadorna – a group of larger, often semi-global waterfowl. 

 

Muscovies naturally eat small coast animals like winkles and crab as well as grass.  They are also well known for life particularly partial to cockroaches, mosquitoes and flies. (It has been recorded that they eat thirty times more houseflies than square flytraps are able to deal with.)

 

Muscovies have raised controversy among those who have an interest in kosher food laws because they do not have a standard avian ‘crop’, though their other unique attributes are commonly usual;  i.e. they have an extra toe and a gizzard and their eggs are not round or greenish.  They also do not eat carrion, another pointer to life an acceptable kosher food fund.

 

They are found as domesticated duck around the world.  In North America, a small wild populace of muscovies reaches into the US in the decrease Rio Grande Valley of Texas.  There are also ‘domesticated, turned wild’ breeding populations of these ducks in nearly every disorder of the USA as well as in the Canadian provinces.

 

Why do I mention all this?

 

Well, it’s because if you delight in the outdoors and want to get as much out of it as possible, keep a lookout for them.  As their natural habitat is near water, any boating experience, especially along a shoreline, may give you the opportunity to see them.  They are huge ducks, weighing around 6 kg on average, are mainly black and white and the males have a pronounced wattle at the top of their bill.  This wattle puts them apart from other ducks.  Duck shooting may be a sport which is of particular interest to you.  If this is so, try the ‘quick compare list of 35 brand name kayaks’ to help you with your choice of hunting boat. 

 

There are of course a host of other species of bird life to look out for around the water’s edge.  Take benefit of a free list of North American ducks, geese and swans compiled from Wikipedia and www.jncc.gov.uk – published in 2007 of water birds around the world.  A few species are endangered which would make it all the more special if you should manage to spot one.  The list contains both the common and the Latin names for the birds and should you not have a bird book, Google images or a book from a public store is always an option for seeing what the birds look like. Take a sketch pad along with you to sketch them.  It may stir the artist within and provide new insights into the wonders of scenery. The list can be found at:

 

The author is a retired high school teacher of geography and maths.

http://www.theboatingstore.co.cc

Try ‘Quick Compare 35 Brand Name Kayaks’ to help you make a choice. Also if you would like a free ebook – an unusual tale set in the days of sailing by well-known and respect author Joseph Conrad, ‘The Secret Sharer’ or a book about travel in El Salvador ‘Slow Bus To Ahuachapan’ by John Drewman then email admin@theboatingstore.co.cc

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