Thanks Don. Good to know about that color being a good indicator.
-- As for the shot. I took it with my "point and shoot and pray and develop and hope and sigh with relief when one actually comes out OK" camera. :-)
I was happy with it though as it was clearly a different bird than any of the rest I had seen that day and it was cruising by so fast I was lucky to have gotten 3 shots off, 2 of which were completely out of focus. The third and final one was this one.
On Monday, September 29, 2014 6:02:31 PM UTC-4, winkumpaughwoodworks wrote:
On Monday, September 29, 2014 6:02:31 PM UTC-4, winkumpaughwoodworks wrote:
Rob,Yeah, definitely a blue wing. That dark at the "wrist", along with the other traits, is a way we usually help narrow the bird down to "teal" sp. The bird in your photo shows a healthy band of dark. Nice shot.Don
Sent from my iPadThank you Louis. I had kind of narrowed it down to 3 of which that was the leading contender although most of the underwing shots of the BWTE I have seen do not show as dark of a stripe on the leading edge of the wing so I was not sure if that was it or not.--It must have been more shadow that actual color on there.Thanks again!
On Monday, September 29, 2014 3:50:55 PM UTC-4, Louis Bevier wrote:A relatively small list of ducks in the world have blue or blue-gray forewings. There are Blue-winged and Cinnamon Teals, Garganey, and four species of shovelers. Given only two species of those are likely on Lake Josephine, I think we've got a good chance at identifying this bird. You were at the right web site for help—Sam Carney's duck identification by wing plumage is a classic. Take a look at this page showing the upper wings of the Blue-winged and Cinnamon Teals: http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/birds/duckplum/ bwciteal.htm
Taking into account the small bill and gray face pattern, your bird fits Blue-winged Teal. Even when they are not at their fanciest, males of both Cinnamon and Blue-winged can be told by a prominent white bar behind the bluish forewing. So your bird is a female. The pattern of the body feathers with neat and entire fringes around all dark feathers (look at those bigger oval feathers to the rear of the wing on the hind flank) together with the wing pattern suggest it is an immature. So that's my guess, immature female Blue-winged Teal.
Louis Bevier
Fairfield
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