
Spica75 wrote:They most certainly do indeed. Any info where the pic is from?

Té Rowan wrote:
These... uhh... mallards!... were found on a shareware CD-ROM.

Té Rowan wrote:These... uhh... mallards!... were found on a shareware CD-ROM.

J. St.C. Patrick wrote:What you have there are common Loons.
Same bird as is found on the Canadian One Dollar Coin, which are commonly called "Loonies"
And where do we keep our Loonies here in Canada?
In a Loonie Bin.

J. St.C. Patrick wrote:What you have there are common Loons.
Same bird as is found on the Canadian One Dollar Coin, which are commonly called "Loonies"
And where do we keep our Loonies here in Canada?
In a Loonie Bin.
Neko- wrote:My first thought on that... he's making that up...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Loonie proved that not to be the case...
Tho I couldn't find anything on that loonie bin, other than https://clone.nl/all/label/loonie%20bin which seems like a discount bin at the record shop.
Anyway... To keep with the thread: https://i.redd.it/eopc06kwn1451.jpg

Té Rowan wrote:These... uhh... mallards!... were found on a shareware CD-ROM.
J. St.C. Patrick wrote:What you have there are common Loons.

J. St.C. Patrick wrote:The Canadian Two Dollar coin is known as a Toonie and has a polar bear on the reverse face.
The toonie moniker is a play on the loonie.
It also means we have the only portrait of Queen Elizabeth II with a bear behind.

Té Rowan wrote:I don't know if I should say "GACK!" over its existence or "PHEW!"[...]
J. St.C. Patrick wrote:In a Loonie Bin.




Also, there is a story of an immigrant referring to the Canada goose as 'cobra chicken'. I would guess that came from its posture and noises.
The Canada goose was rare when I was young during the Fifties. Now it's so common it's a pest. Don't tell me the whole ecology is going down the tubes, please, when we have geese and ducks, and even loons, in our lakes.
Where, thankfully, we have not had any riots.

Ellen Kuhfeld wrote:Darn right! It sounded like a vaguely more cheerful Kuno Kodachi. As for the "Canadian brant", it's called a "Canada goose" around here. (Minnesota is right next door to Canada. We share flora and fauna.
The Canada goose was rare when I was young during the Fifties. Now it's so common it's a pest. Don't tell me the whole ecology is going down the tubes, please, when we have geese and ducks, and even loons, in our lakes. And there is a bald eagle living in our neighborhood, an inner-ring suburb. Where, thankfully, we have not had any riots.


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