The Oldie magazine - October 2021 issue 405

Page 81

The Tufted Duck by john mcewen illustrated by carry akroyd The jaunty topknot on the head of the drake tufted (Aythya fuligula) – allied to the species’s jack-in-the-box water antics – makes them the jokers in the duck pack. Those with only a passing interest in birds, such as children, are excited to find some ducks dive and zoom about underwater. The tufted does this incessantly, diving with particular panache – not at a slant, but on the spot. It emerges after as long as a minute, dry as dust, the water droplets, bright as its yellow eyes, slipping off the black (drake) or brown (duck) waterproof plumage like quicksilver. Until the 19th century, they were only winter migrants. The first record of a British nesting was in 1849, in Yorkshire. Today it is our commonest diving duck. The 19,000 residents are joined in winter by 140,000 incomers, notably from Russia: a tufted ringed in London’s St James’s Park was recovered a year later in Siberia. Freshwater lakes are the preferred breeding habitat and they have benefited from the modern demand for reservoirs and gravel pits. The downy nest is hidden in vegetation. Islets are a favourite location, not least in urban lakes. Ducklings dive adeptly within hours of hatching. Tufted swim in company and fly in small, quick-winged packs. They formed part of Lord Grey’s wildfowl collection at Fallodon and contribute to one of the most memorable passages in his classic book The Charm of Birds. He had two ponds, sometimes dominated by them to the point of overcrowding: ‘Tufted ducks are prone to what Peacock calls “stay-athometiveness”. The young broods are apt to be content with the place in which they have been reared… Some eight or ten of these tufted ducks will stand at my feet, looking up in the most engaging way to be fed by hand.’

Grey was not averse to giving ducks bread – helpful with regard to children’s fun. Tufted tame easily and Grey’s homeraised colony was swelled by indistinguishable intruders. There was ‘nothing to be done but acquiesce’. Early one windless Christmas Day, he found all his duck species congregated to feed at the first pond. So he went and sat by the second, which was contrastingly still and deserted. Slowly the ducks arrived from the other pond and, apparently rejoicing in the previously absent sunlight, ‘began to sport and play’ until ‘there was not a

square foot of water that was not in constant agitation’. One imagines it was the numerous tufted above all that ‘dived unexpectedly, travelled under water, came up in some new place and then, as if surprised by what they saw, dived again with exceeding suddenness’. The chaos abruptly ceased. The ducks swam ashore and slept: ‘There are hours of which it can be said, “Thought was not: in enjoyment it expired.” So it was now, and if anything stirred in the mind at all, it was an echo of the words, “And God saw that it was good.” ’ The Oldie October 2021 81


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Articles inside

Taking a Walk: The joy of Devon’s fake lake Patrick

3min
pages 87-88

Crossword

3min
pages 89-90

On the Road: Giles Coren

4min
page 86

Overlooked Britain Edinburgh’s Café Royal

5min
pages 84-85

I’m an old youth-hostel fan

6min
pages 82-83

Bird of the Month: Tufted

2min
page 81

Drink Bill Knott

5min
page 73

Getting Dressed: Catherine Llewelyn-Evans Brigid Keenan

4min
pages 79-80

Golden Oldies Rachel Johnson

4min
page 68

Exhibitions Huon Mallalieu

2min
pages 69-70

Music Richard Osborne

3min
page 67

Television Roger Lewis

4min
page 66

Film: The Servant

3min
page 64

History

4min
page 63

Making Nice, by Ferdinand

5min
pages 59-60

Media Matters

4min
page 61

The Magician, by Colm

5min
pages 53-54

The Amur River: Between Russia and China, by Colin

3min
pages 49-50

Readers’ Letters

7min
pages 44-46

The Doctor’s Surgery

3min
page 43

Small World

4min
pages 38-40

Letter from America

4min
page 37

Showbiz doesn’t pay

4min
page 36

Postcards from the Edge

4min
pages 34-35

Kim Philby: a traitor and a

6min
pages 22-23

Town Mouse

4min
page 32

Country Mouse

4min
page 33

My brush with the Grim

5min
pages 28-29

Gothic style, from churches

3min
pages 30-31

How bankers lost their credit

4min
page 27

I was scammed

4min
pages 20-21

Julius Caesar and family

5min
pages 18-19

I hate sticky tables

3min
page 13

I was the Krays’ lawyer

7min
pages 14-15

My dream cricket team

4min
pages 16-17

Brian Glanville, king of football writers

3min
page 11

Grumpy Oldie Man

4min
page 10

Gyles Brandreth’s Diary

4min
page 9

The Old Un’s Notes

6min
pages 5-6

Bliss on Toast Prue Leith

2min
pages 7-8
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