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I've got a fondness for Canadian Geese (no not that kind of fondness) > General, non-sequitur type statements re: local birds. e.g.: plastic alligators are not effective to scare away Canadian geese ... but may be effective in scaring away Canadians
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message 101:
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Jackie "the Librarian"
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Dec 29, 2010 06:28PM

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Am I making sense?

I had to google... and found this
We often read in newspapers that an adult goose is capable of about a pound and a half of droppings a day. Is this true? Sharon Pawlak, National Coordinator for the Coalition to Prevent the Destruction of Canada geese has this to say:
Excrement amounts are disputed
A Canada goose does not drop a pound of excrement a day. In a study conducted by Dr. Bruce Manny, research fishery biologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, the average goose produces 0.3432 pounds (5.49 ounces) of wet droppings per day. At 21.04 percent solids in the average goose dropping, this amount of wet droppings is equivalent to 0.0722 pounds (1.15 ounces) of dry droppings per day.
Sharon Pawlak
Medford, N
from http://www.articles.lovecanadageese.c...

Larry wrote: "I can't believe that the robins haven't left Omaha yet. I saw a bunch of them today feeding on ornamental pears."
I've been seeing robins all December.
I've been seeing robins all December.

http://www.learner.org/jnorth/tm/robi...
All robins are not the same: The vast majority of robins do move south in the winter. However, some stick around — and move around — in northern locations.
Robins migrate more in response to food than to temperature. Fruit is the robin's winter food source. As the ground thaws in the spring, they switch to earthworms and insects. While the robins may arrive when temperatures reach 37 degrees, this is because their food becomes available not because the robins themselves need warm temperatures.
Robins wander in the winter: Temperatures get colder as winter progresses. Robins need more food when it's cold and more and more of the fruit gets eaten. Robins move here and there in response to diminishing food supplies and harsh weather. If all robins wintered at their breeding latitude, there wouldn't be enough fruit for them all. So robins tend to spread out in the winter in search of fruit. Most hang out where fruit is abundant, but some take the risk of staying farther north where smaller amounts of fruit remain.
Robins sing when they arrive on territory: Robins sing when they arrive on their breeding territories. Sometimes robins even sing in winter flocks, due to surging hormones as the breeding season approaches. However, in the majority of cases, robins really do wait to sing until they have reached their territory.
Where as the european robin is Erithacus rubecula

American robin is Turdus migratorius

American robin is Turdus migratorius

They have very similar colouring.

We call them "robin, red-breast" around here too, Janine. Didn't realize that was a Dutch term as well.

My brother is kind of like that, Barb. He lives with my mom and she thinks he's adorable. She got very mad at me when I suggested he had some kind of Peter Pan thing going on. WHAT DO YOU MEAN CYNTHIA??
Um, just that the last time he was in a relationship, my 21-year-old was in diapers.

It is tough being the well-adjusted, successful child, isn't it Barb? Poor us.


everything's cuter here.