Tag Archives: waterfowl

Political correctness does not legislate tolerance; it only organizes hatred. — Jacques Barzun

Claude-Grits-Gresham(250)phil

Claude Hamilton Gresham, Jr. (June 21, 1922 – February 18, 2008), better known as Grits Gresham, was an avid sportsman and naturalist and a first-rate outdoor writer and broadcaster. I have many of his books in my library collection and his videos on duck and goose hunting. I have a great many books on hunting in my library collection from many different authors. Still, in my opinion, his book on waterfowl hunting, The Complete Wildfowler, is the finest ever written on the subject. He was from rural South Carolina and highly educated with a bachelor of science and master of science degrees, with a specialty in forestry and wildlife management, from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge. He made his home in Louisiana and is remembered by Robert J. Barham, the Secretary of the Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries and a former Republican member of the Louisiana State Senate who recalled, “as a child, I got to meet him and be around him. He was just so easy to be around. Grits was nothing like the television celebrities of today. People were drawn to him. He made them feel at ease … he made me feel at ease, and I was just a child. … There will never be another like him.” (as cited in Wikipedia) Continue reading

Mallard drake

Mallard drake feeding on a pond next to the Rideau River, April 30, 2013.

Photographed and posted by Geoffrey

Canada geese

Canada geese on the Rideau River responding to the guttural calls I mimicked, April 6, 2013. I hope I did not say anything rude.

Photographed and posted by Geoffrey

Canada geese

Pair of Canada geese swimming on the Rideau River, April 6, 2013.

Photographed and posted by Geoffrey

Drake goldeneye preening.IMG_0530

Drake goldeneye preening his feathers. Viewed and photographed during a morning run with Hera.

Photographed and posted by Geoffrey

Hen mallard in breeding plumage.

Hen mallard getting ready for the spring nesting season 2013. She will need lots of protein to get ready for egg laying, feeding on invertebrates that fill the ponds and puddles formed from melting snow.

Photographed and posted by Geoffrey