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Pintail flies from Cameron parish to Russia

Posted on 3/13/23 at 6:31 am
Posted by LSUballs
RayVegas LA
Member since Feb 2008
37752 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 6:31 am
Pretty crazy.

LINK




quote:

After leaving Louisiana in early March, the duck headed to the eastern Dakotas, to the Prairie Pothole Region, which stretches into Canada and sees the majority of pintail nesting and summering. But then she went offline for six months. “She finally hit service again on a state penitentiary campus in Northern California, of all places,” Link says. Between, she’d flown across northwestern Canada, passed through Alaska, crossed the Bering Sea, and arrived in Russia in May, becoming the first pintail Link—or anyone else—has ever seen cruising to a new continent from down South.



This post was edited on 3/13/23 at 6:32 am
Posted by dstone12
Texan
Member since Jan 2007
30259 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 6:45 am to
I suppose that was a nonstop flight from Kodiak Island to Oregon.

Dang.
Posted by skidry
Member since Jul 2009
3265 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 6:55 am to
Incredible.
Posted by Nodust
Member since Aug 2010
22631 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 7:23 am to
Impressive trip.
Posted by mylsuhat
Mandeville, LA
Member since Mar 2008
48940 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 7:31 am to
Similar flight of migration as sandhill cranes


This post was edited on 3/13/23 at 7:32 am
Posted by Teague
The Shoals, AL
Member since Aug 2007
21694 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 7:38 am to
Bird migrations are amazing. I trapped a male kestrel once in north Alabama that was banded. When I looked up the number, he'd been banded several years earlier in Ontario. Nothing like Russia, but it was still very cool to think about.

Posted by dawg23
Baton Rouge, La
Member since Jul 2011
5065 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 7:39 am to
I clicked on this expecting to learn of some new insect that has invaded half the world.

I'm familiar with horse flies, house flies and deer flies, and have heard of blow flies and fruit flies. But I had never heard of a pintail fly.
Posted by sta4ever
The Pit
Member since Aug 2014
15174 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 8:46 am to
Those darn Putin loving Pintails I swear…
Posted by dstone12
Texan
Member since Jan 2007
30259 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 8:51 am to
So how does a pintail prep for that ~1500 mile trip from Alaska back to Oregon?

Do they just land in the ocean and take a breather?
Do they eat seaweed?
Do they fly overnight?

Because at an estimated 30 mph cruise, that would take them two full days.
Posted by Outdoorreb
Member since Oct 2019
2528 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 8:55 am to
Wonder if this had anything to do with the drought Canada had until last year? She might have had to fly to Russia previously to find enough water or was born there.

Didn’t fully read the article if that was mentioned
Posted by mylsuhat
Mandeville, LA
Member since Mar 2008
48940 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 8:56 am to
They get crazy altitude and get in the jetstream. They are going well over 30mph
Posted by LSUballs
RayVegas LA
Member since Feb 2008
37752 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 9:07 am to
Yea, I googled and found this. Looks like most fly 50 + mph.

LINK

quote:

Most waterfowl fly at speeds of 40 to 60 mph, with many species averaging roughly 50 mph. With a 50 mph tail wind, migrating mallards are capable of traveling 800 miles during an eight-hour flight. Studies of duck energetics have shown that a mallard would have to feed and rest for three to seven days to replenish the energy expended during this eight-hour journey.



also this

quote:

While migrating from Alaska, a hen pintail carrying a satellite transmitter landed on a shrimp boat off the northern Oregon coast. The surprised crew carried the duck safely to shore and released it on a nearby wetland.
This post was edited on 3/13/23 at 9:08 am
Posted by White Bear
Yonnygo
Member since Jul 2014
13891 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 9:21 am to
Spy duck
Posted by dstone12
Texan
Member since Jan 2007
30259 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 10:15 am to
quote:

Most waterfowl fly at speeds of 40 to 60 mph, with many species averaging roughly 50 mph. With a 50 mph tail wind, migrating mallards are capable of traveling 800 miles during an eight-hour flight. Studies of duck energetics have shown that a mallard would have to feed and rest for three to seven days to replenish the energy expended during this eight-hour journey.

Dang

To cover 800 miles in 8 hours is absurd. That means they are going well over 100 mph since it takes some time to get up into the jet stream.

And I’m not even sure how high they get. The polar jet streams are miles up.
This post was edited on 3/13/23 at 10:21 am
Posted by TopWaterTiger
Lake Charles, LA
Member since May 2006
10201 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 11:06 am to
thats wild.
Posted by rattlebucket
SELA
Member since Feb 2009
11446 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 12:54 pm to
Look at that hard right it took in N ark at the nets
Posted by Clyde Tipton
Planet Earth
Member since Dec 2007
38735 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 1:14 pm to
quote:

And I’m not even sure how high they get.


Posted by 6R12
Louisiana
Member since Feb 2005
8651 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 2:55 pm to
Pics of the Pintail or it didn't happen. That's one BAD bird to do this.
Posted by PSUMMERS
Ms
Member since Sep 2014
387 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 3:06 pm to
Think it was 08’ a Pintail was killed in Ruleville Ms that had been banned in Japan.
Posted by White Bear
Yonnygo
Member since Jul 2014
13891 posts
Posted on 3/13/23 at 3:20 pm to
quote:

Look at that hard right it took in N ark at the nets
Got to La and did nothing but circle.
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