Mike Rowinsky
Active member
Went hunting yesterday, my birthday, with my best friend. Beautiful "blue bird" skies along the coast and we didn't see much. Then, as the wind shifted it got a bit darker and we started to see more birds on the move. Several flights of mallards and blacks passed by without hesitating or decoying.
Suddenly, four birds buzzed through our decoy set. They circled back and remained just out of range. Initially we thought them a less desirable species, but I noticed the rather large bill. During their third pass I knocked the drake out of the flight. He's got the early hormone markings common for a northern bird, unlike the pure white breast found in southern birds.
(Could someone move the attached picture here please.)
I've never seen a Northern Shoveler outside of a museum's collection. They're beautiful and according to all I've spoken to extremely rare here in CT.
I've already dropped him off at the taxidermist.
Thanks for letting me share with the group!
View attachment Northern Shoveler.jpeg
Suddenly, four birds buzzed through our decoy set. They circled back and remained just out of range. Initially we thought them a less desirable species, but I noticed the rather large bill. During their third pass I knocked the drake out of the flight. He's got the early hormone markings common for a northern bird, unlike the pure white breast found in southern birds.
(Could someone move the attached picture here please.)
I've never seen a Northern Shoveler outside of a museum's collection. They're beautiful and according to all I've spoken to extremely rare here in CT.
I've already dropped him off at the taxidermist.
Thanks for letting me share with the group!
View attachment Northern Shoveler.jpeg