
17 November 2025
In Schenley Park …
A Hawk:
My friend Andrea and I were walking up the Lower Trail on Friday morning when she told me to pause. Right in front of us was a red-tailed hawk at eye level, hunting for breakfast. The chipmunks and squirrels laid low. When we walked past he flew up to the mossy branch pictured at top and resumed his hunt. All of these photos were taken with my cellphone; he was that close.
A Croc:
On Thursday the wind was so strong that it blew all the duckweed to the east end of Panther Hollow Lake, making it easier for ducks and geese to eat it. While Canada geese browsed the duckweed I noticed a small pink something … ? … near them. Shadows were in the way.

When the shadows were gone it was easy to see that the small pink thing was a child’s Croc. Someone went home without her shoe.

The Odd Duck:
Also on Thursday, Charity Kheshgi and I counted 3 mallards and The Odd Duck. She was paired with a male mallard so he knows she’s his type but what type is she?



We speculated that she was an American black duck X domestic duck hybrid, but in fact there are domestic mallard breeds that approach or match this plumage:
- chocolate brown back, wings and head
- warmer brown speckled undertail coverts and sides
- white chest.
My guess is she’s a domestic duck escapee, perhaps a white domestic duck mish-mashed with a Dark Campbell or Cayuga Duck. She has doppelgängers in Kitchener, Ontario in 2018 and 2011. –> In the comments, Candy Morgan suggests she’s a Swedish Black Duck.




What a wonderful and interesting post! Thank you, Kate. Happy Monday, Happy New Week. I loved the “croc”. That was so cute.
hah! i took a photo of that same croc on 10/1!
Cool! That Croc has been there a long time!
Could the Odd Duck be a Swedish Black Duck? I saw a few at Edinboro Lake a few years ago and the white front on this Odd Duck reminds me of them.
Candy, it sure looks similar! Too bad we could not see its belly.