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~ a celebration of nature

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Tag Archives: Egyptian Goose

An Egyptian goose comes to town

30 Thursday Oct 2025

Posted by sconzani in birds

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

Alopochen aegypticus, birding, birdwatching, British birds, Cardiff birding, Egyptian Goose, Lamby Lake, non-native birds

The BTO (British Trust for Ornithology) website reckons that the Egyptian goose (Alopochen aegyptiaca) was introduced to England in the 17th century, presumably to enhance the parks and gardens of the rich with an exotic species – not quite a Peacock, but you get the idea.

Like many other introduced species, these geese have since spread their wings and flown to pastures new or, in this case, more likely lakes, though that colonisation has been quite gradual. The BTO site states:

In 1991 the population was estimated at c.900 individuals, 91% of which were in Norfolk. Since then, the species has colonised the rest of East Anglia, much of London and parts of the Home Counties.

And, from further down the page, by 2013-2017 the UK breeding population size had grown to 1850 pairs.

Sightings of these birds in south Wales have been relatively rare but do seem to have been increasing over the past couple of years. An Egyptian goose – possibly this same bird but there’s no way to be sure – spent several months on a local lake earlier in the year; it was first reported in the WhatsApp group on 23 March (though, of course, it may have been there before that, just not reported by any local birders) and then intermittently through April, May and June. Reports then stopped until ten days ago, when a birder posted that an ‘Egyptian goose set up residency a couple of weeks ago’, which would have been in early October.

As I’d not seen one of these geese since I was last in London six years ago, I decided to go take a look at this local bird. The lake it’s calling home is on the other side of Cardiff and I didn’t fancy the six mile walk through a very industrial area on busy roads so it was a bit of a trek by train and bus to get there … but definitely worth it.

With feathers in multiple shades of brown, with rich rust and bottle green highlights, Egyptian geese are very handsome birds, and this one’s no exception. It looked very settled amongst the other waterfowl, though the Coots were keeping a close eye on it. It was certainly not bothered by the presence of people and, though it turned its nose (beak?) up at my offering of suet pellets, which the other birds were happy to scoff, it happily grabbed the white bread thrown in the water by other visitors, so has presumably lived in a public park setting previously. I was very pleased I’d made the effort to go and see this exotic visitor.

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308/365 Birds of St James’s Park

04 Monday Nov 2019

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Bahama pintail, birding, birding in London, birds in St James's Park London, birdwatching, Black swan, Canada goose, Coot, Egyptian Goose, Greylag goose, Moorhen, Ring-necked parakeet, Shelduck, St James's Park London, Tufted duck

I’ve just returned from three days with two friends in London. We were doing touristy things as our Australian friend hadn’t been to London before but I did manage some birding during our walk through St James’s Park. Though abundant and obviously breeding locally, most of these cannot really be classed as wild birds but they’re lovely just the same.

191104 st james park

The birds we saw included Mute swan and Black swan, Black-headed gull, Moorhen, Egyptian and Greylag and Canada goose, Feral pigeon, Shelduck and some species of white duck that I don’t recognise, Grey heron, Ring-necked parakeet, Bahama pintail, Tufted duck and more. Unfortunately, the resident Pelicans were hiding on their island so we saw them not.

191104 moorhen
191104 egyptian goose

191104 greylag
191104 shelduck

191104 heron white ducks191104 ring-necked parakeet

191104 bahama pintail
191104 black swan

191104 can goose coot191104 tufted duck

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Birding at RSPB Dungeness

31 Tuesday Jul 2018

Posted by sconzani in birds, insects, nature

≈ 4 Comments

Tags

birding, birdwatching, British birds, British butterflies, Common tern, Egyptian Goose, Emperor dragonfly, RSPB Dungeness, Snipe, Wood sandpiper

I had never been to RSPB Dungeness until my visit with my friend Jill two weeks ago but, if you can get past the fact that there’s a nuclear power station buzzing away just down the road, then you should be able to appreciate what a wonderful place it is. (British people seem to take nuclear power stations for granted but, as a nuclear-free New Zealander, I still find them quite scary places and really rather menacing!)

180731 Dungeness nuclear power station180731 RSPB Dungeness

This is a unique landscape of low rolling shingle banks, interspersed with patchy areas of low scrub and large shallow pools – it’s water bird heaven!

180731 Common terns (2)
180731 Common terns (1)

180731 Common terns (3)

Our first highlight was seeing the Common terns that breed at Dungeness. Terns are such agile flyers and to see their young fledglings was a real treat.

180731 Egyptian geese

Eqyptian geese have also bred here, and we saw a pair with two well-grown goslings.

180731 snipe

I had my best-ever views of a Snipe that decided to come out and poke around the muddy edges of one of the pools. These are normally such secretive birds so it was a real pleasure to watch this bird foraging.

180731 wood sandpiper

And the Snipe was joined by not one but two Wood sandpipers.

180731 water birds galore

Each of the six hides on the two-mile-long main trail offers different views, different birds, and, after motoring down to a cafe near the lighthouse (and that power station), we also stopped off on our return to check out the two shorter trails and hides on the opposite side of the road. Here we had good, though distant views of a Greenshank and a Bar-tailed godwit. Cracking!

180731 b Painted lady
180731 b peacock
180731 b small copper

As well as the birds, the wildflowers added lots of pretty colour to our wander, and we were entertained as we walked by large numbers of beautiful butterflies and debonaire dragonflies, though it wasn’t quite so pleasant watching an Emperor dragon biting the wings off a Gatekeeper.

180731 b emperor

Here’s my bird list for the day (not including a lot of smaller birds that were flitting about the bushes while I was marvelling at the butterflies): Teal, Lesser black-backed gull, Tufted duck, Mallard, Herring gull, Common tern (with young), Cormorant, Sandwich tern, Common sandpiper, Wood sandpiper (2), Snipe, Egyptian goose (and goslings), Ringed plover, Pochard, Little grebe, Great crested grebe, Lapwing,Coot, Dunlin, Goldeneye, Reed warbler, Redshank, Woodpigeon, Oystercatcher, Grey heron, Great white egret (2), Greylag goose, Mute swan, Black-headed gull, Shelduck, Shoveler, Carrion crow, Swallow, House martin, Greenshank, Bar-tailed godwit, Pied wagtail, Gadwall and Magpie.

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Walk like an Egyptian

27 Saturday Feb 2016

Posted by sconzani in birds, nature, nature photography

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

African birds, Alopochen aegypticus, birding, birds, birdwatching, British birds, Egyptian Goose, Serengeti National Park, Tanzania

It might look like a goose and be called a goose but the Egyptian Goose (Alopochen aegypticus) is not really a goose at all. It’s more closely related to the Shelduck and occasionally shares that duck’s habit of nesting in a burrow or hole in the ground, though it has also been known to build a nest as high as 80 feet above the ground in a tree. The bird was introduced to Britain as an ornamental wildfowl species, for the king’s collection of birds in St James’s Park in London in 1678, but has since established itself in the wild, though it does still have a penchant for the grounds of large halls and estates, with their perfect habitat combination of old woodland and extensive areas of water.

160227 egyptian goose (2)

My first photo here was taken at just such a place, the wonderful Tatton Park Estate, near Knutsford in Cheshire. But the second photo was taken in the Serengeti National Park in Tanzania. Although it’s called an Egyptian Goose, it is actually native to Africa south of the Sahara and the Nile Valley, but it was considered sacred by the ancient Egyptians, which I presume is how it got its common name.

160227 egyptian goose (1)

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About me

sconzani

sconzani

I'm a writer and photographer; researcher and blogger; birder and nature lover; countryside rambler and city strider; volunteer and biodiversity recorder.

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