Here's a few more...
Yes, I saw yours go through yesterday, followed closely by my own personal avalanche from my HW acct ... that was one ton of emails-- one saying I received a "gift", the second being saying one of my products had been "gifted". I'm surprised they "gifted" me my own products.They're definitely up to "J". I got something like 300 emails about receiving a gift on Rendo yesterday.
I have seen some gifts not come in alphabetically... so be patient. Its quite possible they assembled the initial list alphabetically, but later added more to it unalphabetized. Progress isn't necessarily steady either; some days are quiet (a couple dozen to none) and then days like yesterday where I got over a thousand emails. It does appear to happen Monday through Friday-- no weekend work.I have not gotten a single notice yet. I'm concerned now. I thought they weren't doing it alphabetically. But if they are, I'm definitely not in the loop.
Dana
Was it perhaps the East Indie Duck (3rd picture down the page)?@Ken Gilliland I hope you dont mind my asking but I saw an unusual bird today and you were the only one I could thing of that migt be able to tell me what it was after a failed google search.
It was a black duck with white on the front of the neck, same shape and size as your normal duck that you see on every park pond.
Sorry I didn't get a picture for you, there were three or four together with a handful of the normal coloured ducks
Maybe? or could have been Pomeranian too just going by the pictures. If I see them again I'll try and get picturesWas it perhaps the East Indie Duck (3rd picture down the page)?
Sorry for my delay, I spent the last week cooking... I do a big 2-day Bon Appetit Thanksgiving for family (day of) and friends (day after)... then spent a few days recovering and cleaning up the house.@Ken Gilliland I hope you dont mind my asking but I saw an unusual bird today and you were the only one I could thing of that migt be able to tell me what it was after a failed google search.
It was a black duck with white on the front of the neck, same shape and size as your normal duck that you see on every park pond.
Sorry I didn't get a picture for you, there were three or four together with a handful of the normal coloured ducks
Hi Ken, no worries. I am not getting email notifications from here so having to remember to check from time to time.Sorry for my delay, I spent the last week cooking... I do a big 2-day Bon Appetit Thanksgiving for family (day of) and friends (day after)... then spent a few days recovering and cleaning up the house.
There are a couple important details I need in order to help on the ID... I'm guessing its a fresh water location because you mentioned "park pond", but some parks are near the ocean, so knowing that the pond was definitely "inland" is helpful. The next thing is a general location... where did to see it? (e.g. Western USA, Europe, Australia?) I'm guessing Europe because "coloured" has the "U" in it.
Apart from the "Black Ducks" link posted above... If its relatively close to the ocean, a female/juvenile Scoter sort of matches that description and is much more "common" than the "East Indie" or "Pomeranian"
Shape and size they were the same as the Mallard ducks but black with a maybe 2 inch patch of white on the front of the neck just up a bit from where it joins the brest. I think there were three maybe four of them.While none of these appear to exactly match your description, here's a list of New Zealand's Ducks.
With birding, I always go to the most logical and obvious choices first before thinking I have spotted a rarity or vagrant. Look at a field guide and see if the bird you think it might be, is within the range the field guide says. Check behavior; does it match (e.g. sea duck and fresh ducks generally don't mix). Looking at the two most "black" ducks in that New Zealand list, I say those would be the male scaup and shelduck. Ducks, just like humans, are not all exactly alike... If there was only one-- it could be a variant-- I don't know how much white as on the neck but it's possible it could be ones of those with some of its outer neck feathers out of place exposing the white down feathers underneath or some leucistic traits.