
Uploaded with ImageShack.us
champcaller wrote:and THAT is a duck hunt.DUCK-HUNT wrote:
for exmaple you could kill a 4 greenheads (two banded), a mallard/black cross, and a mallard/gaddy cross and smash a hot blonde on the way back to the ramp and call it a hell of a day
It is, I think! A white cheeked pintail. Must be from the hurricane?Tedl10 wrote:looks kinda like a rosy cheeked pintail?
Do tell...Wingman wrote:Did you kill that in Mississippi?
champcaller wrote:and THAT is a duck hunt.DUCK-HUNT wrote:
for exmaple you could kill a 4 greenheads (two banded), a mallard/black cross, and a mallard/gaddy cross and smash a hot blonde on the way back to the ramp and call it a hell of a day
+1Hambone wrote:White-cheeked pintails are also known as Bahama pintails. They are found in Cuba, and from the name, I would guess in the Bahamas as well. That being the case, it is not out of the realm of reason that one might stray to Florida.
The White-cheeked Pintail (Anas bahamensis), also known as the Bahama Pintail or Summer Duck,[2] is a species of dabbling duck. It was first described by Linnaeus in his Systema naturae in 1758 under its current scientific name.
Distribution and habitat
It is found in the Caribbean, South America, and the Galápagos Islands.[4] It occurs on waters with some salinity, such as brackish lakes, estuaries and mangrove swamps.[4] There are three subspecies:
A. b. bahamensis - Lesser Bahama Pintail[2] - in the Caribbean, and a vagrant to southern Florida
A. b. rubirostris - Greater Bahama Pintail[2] - in South America; it may be partly migratory, breeding in Argentina and wintering further north.[4]
A. b. galapagensis - Galapagos Pintail[2] - in the Galapagos
Users browsing this forum: Amazon [Bot] and 11 guests