arctangent > Why freeze both feet when one at a time works?

Domestic geese of a frozen Huron River.
arctangent > A cloud of birds, species unknown.  I didn't count them, but they surely number in the many hundreds.
arctangent > Saturday night bath.
arctangent > Who knew?
That Canada geese had blue feathers on the undersides of their wings.
arctangent > Neverending... the task of grooming feathers.
arctangent > Ignoring this intruder...the brood of mallards remains settled down...except for the lone restless one.
arctangent > Family grouping of young mallards.

When this was taken, the adult males in the park were all molting into eclipse plumage.  In this group, no such sign of molting was apparent, so I believe they are all this year's "crop", none of which have yet taken on their first breeding plumage feathers.
arctangent > Young mallard grooming its wing.

Yellow bill...probably a young male.
arctangent > Who knew?
That mallard eyelids close from the bottom upward, rather than from the top downward.
Why freeze both feet when one at a time works?

Domestic geese of a frozen Huron River.
arctangent > Why freeze both feet when one at a time works?

Domestic geese of a frozen Huron River.
Why freeze both feet when one at a time works?

Domestic geese of a frozen Huron River.
See photo in gallery

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