Duck Or Drake?
Small Holding|July - August 2017

It depends on when you want to know says Chris Ashton

Chris Ashton
Duck Or Drake?

The popular image of the mallard is the smart drake with the iridescent green head and white collar, rich claret chest and elegant grey flank feathers. He is in his nuptial or courting plumage, designed to attract a female with a quiver of the green head feathers, and flash of the blue wing bar as he displays to her in the breeding season. He wears this from early autumn through to the following spring, when, apart from the blue speculum, the other body feathers appear drab and blotchy.

The drake no longer needs the attractions when he slopes off in summer, leaving his mate to incubate the eggs, raise the family and do all the work. Males tend to loiter in single-sex groups in the summer months, until the season for pairing up in the autumn comes round again.

By mid-summer, all the mallards on the canal appear to be female. The drakes have moulted and are in disguise. Just to confuse you - and their predators - they have adopted juvenile-style feathers, which are very similar to those of the females. These brownish colours are better for camouflage, especially when the flight feathers are dropped around June/July, and fleeing the fox is not so easy. You can still tell that they are drakes if you look carefully at the bill colour: it stays green.

As well as losing the white collar and green head plumage, drakes also lose the curled sex feathers on the rump which changes from glossy black to a brown, more typical of the female. The feathers stay like this until the early autumn moult when the birds moult again and refresh their plumage for the next breeding season.

The ducks, too, moult their body feathers twice, but it’s far less obvious than in the male. They just look a little bit darker over the summer months as their hormones change. However, both sexes only drop their flight feathers once: these are crucial for their survival.

This story is from the July - August 2017 edition of Small Holding.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the July - August 2017 edition of Small Holding.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM SMALL HOLDINGView All
What About Bees On A Smallholding? Designing The Apiary
Small Holding

What About Bees On A Smallholding? Designing The Apiary

Claire Waring considers how to arrange your hives

time-read
4 mins  |
July - August 2017
The Boer Goat Looks, Personality And Great Meat!
Small Holding

The Boer Goat Looks, Personality And Great Meat!

At the start of her own Boer goat enterprise, Jack Smellie talks to several existing producers and explains why Boers and their meat have so much to offer, as well as gaining valuable advice for newbies such as herself……

time-read
8 mins  |
July - August 2017
Duck Or Drake?
Small Holding

Duck Or Drake?

It depends on when you want to know says Chris Ashton

time-read
6 mins  |
July - August 2017
Handling Alpacas
Small Holding

Handling Alpacas

Practical suggestions from Joy Whitehead

time-read
5 mins  |
July - August 2017
Keeping Lambs
Sheep Goats and Alpacas

Keeping Lambs

We were lucky, we hadn’t been looking, well we had, but not seriously and this property just crept up on us.

time-read
8 mins  |
Winter 2016/2017
Smallholding In France
Sheep Goats and Alpacas

Smallholding In France

The end of what had been feeling like an endless summer, arrived with a bit of a shock, with early November temperatures suddenly falling from the high 20’s, to the surprise of waking up to a light frost.

time-read
6 mins  |
Winter 2016/2017
Wool And Fleece In Winter?
Sheep Goats and Alpacas

Wool And Fleece In Winter?

Although the main shearing season for sheep is from May to September across the UK, there is plenty of fleece being harvested at other times of year.

time-read
6 mins  |
Winter 2016/2017
New Year Resolutions
Small Holding

New Year Resolutions

Jessica Wombwell looks at improvement ideas to stick to

time-read
4 mins  |
January - February 2018
Rearing Your Own Christmas Dinner
Small Holding

Rearing Your Own Christmas Dinner

The project will be both challenging and rewarding says Janice Houghton-Wallace

time-read
4 mins  |
July - August 2017
The Moult Is A Natural Process
Small Holding

The Moult Is A Natural Process

Jessica Wombwell explains why there is feather loss in poultry

time-read
4 mins  |
July - August 2017