At 0805 this morning, John W and I arrived at the originally-posted location, the farm field north of the Willey District Rd., but west of the junction with Rt. 1. Numbers of Canada geese were seen at 200 yds, but more were hidden by the roll of the land. Eventually we saw 102 Canada geese and 1 pink-footed goose. Because of the angle, neither John nor I saw the bird's legs. At 0845 a bald eagle flew over, spooking the birds, which took off flying northeast. They apparently ended up where Joel saw them a bit later. No photos..
Jerry Smith in Orrington
In a message dated 11/7/2012 10:07:34 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, joelandsandy@gmail.com writes:
It had moved, but I re-located it in a much larger (200?) flock of Canada Geese in a field on the south side of Rte. 1, about 1/4 mile east of Narraguagus HS. On the DeLorme this is map 25, D4, the stretch of Rte. 1 east of Webb District Rd. but before Harrington.The flock was not far off the road, but was showing a slight reaction to my presence, so I got a good look and left, in case anyone else wants to try for this bird. The flock was grazing, walking slowly, and the goose's thick, very pink legs (with no bands) were obvious as it moved. Per Bill Sheehan's suggestion I looked for "halluxes" (halluces?), or hind toes. I think they were present. It was hard to see, as the foot was just visible for a moment now and then as the bird walked through short grass; but I think I saw the black termini of the toes silhouetted against the pink of the feet for brief moments. As before, the PFG moved to the far side of the flock after I began observing it. No pictures due to distance and fear of spooking.If anyone wants to contact me, I'm at 954 422 2609. Good luck!Joel Wilcox--
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