"Mule duck"?
- timberjack
- Duck South Addict
- Posts: 1321
- Joined: Wed Dec 12, 2001 1:01 am
- Location: Louisville, MS
- Contact:
Not trying to be funny, but has anyone ever heard of a hen showing male characteristics? It may be some type of hormonal imbalance. I'm a fisheries biologist so Scott would be the to ask, but I do know that fish can change sex depending on conditions, but to my knowledge the higher animals don't do this.
Just my .01$--it ain't enough to be .02$
Wes
Just my .01$--it ain't enough to be .02$
Wes
Beatings will continue until morale improves!!!
- Double R 2
- Duck South Addict
- Posts: 6206
- Joined: Tue Apr 22, 2003 12:06 pm
- Location: Duck blinds of the World
- Contact:
Take a "look under the tail", Wingman, and first confirm that it is indeed a drake. My initial impression is that it is neither a hybrid nor a drake. I've shot two such similar mallards and each were, in fact, hen birds. I was told by the waterfowl ecologist at State that the birds were an old hen that had experienced a menopausal-like (my interpretation, not his) shift in hormones. Yes, I'm serious.
Ramsey Russell's GetDucks.com® It's duck season somewhere. Full-service, full-time agency specializing in world-wide wingshooting and trophy bird hunts. Toll free 1-866-438-3897. Visit our website to view 100s of client testimonials, 1000s of photos.
Now remember we can get ducks down here from the central, miss, and atlantic flyways so unless its banded you never know where "our ducks" come from. That being said the eastern seaboard has tons of coastal wetlands where mottled ducks breed as well as some mallards. Another possibility is that duck's daddy may have come down to say cameron parish where he met up with a hot mottled mama and followed her to parts unknown where they came up with this weird cross. Not that I'm an expert refuting some of ya'lls ideas I'm just adding some logic to my prior thought.
-
- Newbie
- Posts: 19
- Joined: Mon Feb 24, 2003 5:46 pm
Just put him on the window sill, and he'll be ripe in a few days.
I live in N. Al, and have been fortunate to take 4 Blacks already this year. I genarally take one or two a season. Most Mal-Black Hybrids seem to look mostly like a black duck, with 'hints' of mallard in them,i.e green stripe through the eye, white slash on the speculum.
Most Hybrids appear to be black when picked up, an upon closer inspection reveal themselves as a disappointing hybrid-very common here now-a pure black is again a trophy. Alas, a hybrid is an 'Other', and if you can get six of the big ass mules to carry home, the kids will eat just fine tonight.
I live in N. Al, and have been fortunate to take 4 Blacks already this year. I genarally take one or two a season. Most Mal-Black Hybrids seem to look mostly like a black duck, with 'hints' of mallard in them,i.e green stripe through the eye, white slash on the speculum.
Most Hybrids appear to be black when picked up, an upon closer inspection reveal themselves as a disappointing hybrid-very common here now-a pure black is again a trophy. Alas, a hybrid is an 'Other', and if you can get six of the big ass mules to carry home, the kids will eat just fine tonight.
I'm with 'Double R' on this one........black ducks mallard drakes and crosses have olive bills. Molting mallard drakes have olive bills. The bill on this duck (from the color in the photo) is more like a hen mallard's.
If I remember right......Mottled duck bills are yellowish.......feet are green (aren't they?) Isola is a little out of their normal range of distribution, both nesting and wintering.
Look at the mottling under the tail......and around the breast patch......how speckled it appears. Then you got the hint of a neck ring and green splotches on the head.
It's a 'He-She'.......Drag Queen!
If I remember right......Mottled duck bills are yellowish.......feet are green (aren't they?) Isola is a little out of their normal range of distribution, both nesting and wintering.
Look at the mottling under the tail......and around the breast patch......how speckled it appears. Then you got the hint of a neck ring and green splotches on the head.
It's a 'He-She'.......Drag Queen!

Identify
You have a cross between a Widegon(Balpate) Drake and a Mallard Hen. The sex is probably a female by looking at the head and body but there is no set rule on this.
- Double R 2
- Duck South Addict
- Posts: 6206
- Joined: Tue Apr 22, 2003 12:06 pm
- Location: Duck blinds of the World
- Contact:
The orange bill is the tip off. Also, describe the white wing bar located atop of the speculum does it extend into the tertials (I'm betting that it does)? C'mon Wingman, you gonna "look under the tail" or not? Simple as that.
Ramsey Russell's GetDucks.com® It's duck season somewhere. Full-service, full-time agency specializing in world-wide wingshooting and trophy bird hunts. Toll free 1-866-438-3897. Visit our website to view 100s of client testimonials, 1000s of photos.
I looked under the tail, but didn't look long enough....hate lingering in that area
I spread the wing....the speculum is bordered on top and bottom by white/black just like a mallard and it was the same blue/purple iridescent as the mallard, but it was almost a quarter inch longer from top to bottom than the other mallard we shot.
The black just below the white on the speculum seemed to be more pronounced than on the other mallard.
The guy that shot it seemed to think it was a widgeon cross.
The bill was the same orange as a hen that we shot this morning, but had no black splotches on it like a hen's does. It was just solid "hen orange".
This duck was definitely bigger than the other drake in the photo...or maybe certain areas were. The head looked fatter, the breast was as large as the other.
The mystery continues. LOLA....ell, oh, ell, aay, LOLA! I'm not the world's most masculine man, but I know what I am I'm a man I'm a man...and so is LOLA...ell, oh, ell, aay, LOLA.

I spread the wing....the speculum is bordered on top and bottom by white/black just like a mallard and it was the same blue/purple iridescent as the mallard, but it was almost a quarter inch longer from top to bottom than the other mallard we shot.
The black just below the white on the speculum seemed to be more pronounced than on the other mallard.
The guy that shot it seemed to think it was a widgeon cross.
The bill was the same orange as a hen that we shot this morning, but had no black splotches on it like a hen's does. It was just solid "hen orange".
This duck was definitely bigger than the other drake in the photo...or maybe certain areas were. The head looked fatter, the breast was as large as the other.
The mystery continues. LOLA....ell, oh, ell, aay, LOLA! I'm not the world's most masculine man, but I know what I am I'm a man I'm a man...and so is LOLA...ell, oh, ell, aay, LOLA.
ISAIAH 40:31
“I ask you to judge me by the enemies I have made.”
― Franklin D. Roosevelt
“I ask you to judge me by the enemies I have made.”
― Franklin D. Roosevelt
Wingman wrote:I looked under the tail, but didn't look long enough....hate lingering in that area![]()
Ramsey......do you get the feeling that the boy doesn't know what he's looking for down there?
Rob....'shouldn't have to look very long......and starin' at it ain't gonna tell ya anything. Take yo finger and rake it over the vent, son. If something pops-up outa there, it's 'his' winky. If it don't .......then apologize profusely.




- Double R 2
- Duck South Addict
- Posts: 6206
- Joined: Tue Apr 22, 2003 12:06 pm
- Location: Duck blinds of the World
- Contact:
"the speculum is bordered on top and bottom by white/black just like a mallard and it was the same blue/purple iridescent as the mallard, but it was almost a quarter inch longer from top to bottom"
Thanks Wingman. If that reads as I think, then it says the white extends beyond the speculum and 1/4 inch into the greater tertial coverts, a tell-tale sign of a hen mallard wings: "The white bar anterior to the speculum extends onto the greater tertial coverts on all female wings but terminates at the proximal edge of the speculum on nearly all male wings (greater tertial coverts brown, one or more with white edging" per http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/tools/duckplum/mallard.htm).
While aging and sexes waterfowl pursuant to banding, it is oftentimes necessary to do a cloacal examination to properly age the bird. That's what I meant by "look under the tail" Press your index fingers on the back of the bird beneath where the vent is and pull the vent gently with your thumbs. If it's a drake, you'll know it because it'll pop out. But it aint gonna happen because it's a hen.
Thanks Wingman. If that reads as I think, then it says the white extends beyond the speculum and 1/4 inch into the greater tertial coverts, a tell-tale sign of a hen mallard wings: "The white bar anterior to the speculum extends onto the greater tertial coverts on all female wings but terminates at the proximal edge of the speculum on nearly all male wings (greater tertial coverts brown, one or more with white edging" per http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/tools/duckplum/mallard.htm).
While aging and sexes waterfowl pursuant to banding, it is oftentimes necessary to do a cloacal examination to properly age the bird. That's what I meant by "look under the tail" Press your index fingers on the back of the bird beneath where the vent is and pull the vent gently with your thumbs. If it's a drake, you'll know it because it'll pop out. But it aint gonna happen because it's a hen.
Ramsey Russell's GetDucks.com® It's duck season somewhere. Full-service, full-time agency specializing in world-wide wingshooting and trophy bird hunts. Toll free 1-866-438-3897. Visit our website to view 100s of client testimonials, 1000s of photos.

And in the name of science

I don't know how big a mallard "winky" is, but nothing protuded as it would on a coon or otter...of course, I have a pic...here's the link:
http://www.fowlmood.com/files/winky.jpg
And after reviewing this site: http://www.texomaguideservice.com/Ducks ... screen.htm all of that Ramsey-biologist jive suddenly made sense.
I deduct that the bird was indeed a drake. The white strip that borders the speculum doesn't extend into the tertials. But why the orange bill?
Wingman
ISAIAH 40:31
“I ask you to judge me by the enemies I have made.”
― Franklin D. Roosevelt
“I ask you to judge me by the enemies I have made.”
― Franklin D. Roosevelt
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Amazon [Bot] and 5 guests