Monday, April 03, 2017

That Certain Something

Imprinting is as powerful as falling in love or looking for food when you are hungry. Trying to break the pattern and look the other way is almost impossible as the force is strong. 

 "The most famous psychological demonstrations of this is the work of Konrad Lorenz (1907-1989) who discovered that incubator-hatched graylag gueeses would “imprint” on the first moving thing they saw, very specifically in the first 36 hours of life. He called the process “stamping in” .This specific time period has become known as the critical period. The goslings imprinted on his black walking boots, and would follow him about as others would their mother. He also found that Jackdaws who imprinted on him presented him with juicy worms (often in his ear-holes). He later showed that these ducklings would even imprint on inanimate objects like a red balloon and even a cardboard box." This from an article from Psychology Today. 

Just as babies imprint on their mother's voices in the womb, birds imprint on their parents songs of warning, presenting food, and joy after they hatch. There is a critical period where imprinting is the strongest. In ducks and geese it is 24-48 hours after hatching. In cats it is 2-7 weeks, dogs 2-10 weeks (which is why it is important to visit the litter as early as possible and breathe into the mouth of the puppy you select before it is released) and in primates it takes 6-12 months.  Remember that perfume smell  or that  song that suddenly stops you in your tracks with a memory...an imprinting?

Here is a fun link to an interesting humming bird imprinting escapade.


It seems that geese imprint on their nesting site and will return year after year.  I also have found in my research that geese nesting on an osprey site is not that rare.  They lay their eggs a week or more earlier than osprey and do take osprey nests and in most cases hold them.

I have been thinking about this imprinting also because my dear osprey do not want to move on. They have imprinted on this part of the river. They cannot use their nest because of the damn goose. They decided to return to my husband's boat which was an earlier nesting site before we put up the osprey platform in defense.  They were dropping sticks over the afternoon.  Hubby chased them away and removed the sticks.  They returned!


In my husband's defense he is not an engineer and he also wanted to use some stuff he already had:  PVC pipe and bird netting.  Anyway, this Rube Goldberg seems to be working!!

Now they have turned to our neighbor's boat.  He has no concern and while they have dropped sticks, they do not seem to be building a nest.  They just do the "honey" dance on the boat now and again.


Hubby thinks they are waiting for the geese to hatch and leave.  Maybe he is right.  They perch on a tree branch over the platform each day and watch.


These osprey are very fearful of me as they seem to remember years ago when I chased them off our boat.  It is hard for me to get close enough to take a photo before they fly.  

Unreasonably, I am mad at the geese and will certainly find a way to dissuade them next spring until when the osprey return.  I could never have predicted that living in the woods could be so demanding!

13 comments:

  1. Fascinating subject
    Good boat cover.
    Weird that I was thinking about imprinting the other day...a kid thrills to see his mother freak out, cute innocent fun lots of laughing. Going back to him at 5 months, seeing him standing in his crib for the first time...my joy was a giggling riot. The room filled with happiness. He laughs. I laugh. Big moment. I believe that infant thrill imprinted on him. In other words, imprinting isn't just for ducks. :)

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  2. Down here we often see a long moving stick on boats. The sweep of the long arm does dissuade the gulls.

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  3. Hubby returned the expensive noise detractor as it did not work at all. This cage finally made it work.

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  4. sounds like you need some kind of arbitration award! :D

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  5. A herder of birds! Exciting time of the year!

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  6. Nature certainly presents us with a lot of adventure and drama if we take the time to look for it.

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  7. Well, I don't blame you for taking sides in this territorial dispute. Those geese are usurpers!

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  8. So imprinting is bigger than just attaching to the first object seen I'd never thought of locations.

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  9. This is becoming quite an interesting story!

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  10. My question of the week was "what makes you nostalgic?". The answers are all definitely proof of imprinting.

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  11. perhaps a second nesting platform. nature is so interesting. it's a full time job just observing it.

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  12. Well all I am thinking is how we become involved with the nature around us, different species enact their lives in front of us and suddenly we are drawn into that web of worry - will they breed and successfully raise their young? will there be enough food around? A second nesting platform seems like a good idea, and peace of mind ;)

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  13. Tough going always to interfere with Mother Nature, as you help the bullies not win... I'm still wondering about goslings falling off the platform...

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Glad to hear from you once again. I really like these visits. Come sit on this log and tell me what you are thinking.