Winged Portraitures :: Hooded merganser (5x7)

Sale Price:$18.00 Original Price:$30.00
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why did i puff my chest,

when i knew she wasn’t even looking

taíno-borikenaíki name from the word duck: yaguása; Spanish: pato

collection: winged portraitures

medium: acrylic on canvas

size: 5x7

About the hooded merganser

Small diving duck with thin serrated bill. Breeding males have showy black-and-white crest, a couple zebra stripes on the white breast, and cinnamon-colored sides. Females are brown with a puffy crest and partly yellow bill. Looks slender and long-necked in flight, with very fast wingbeats. Widespread across much of North America, but usually only seen in pairs or small flocks. Nests in cavities near small ponds or marshes; especially fond of wooded swamps. In winter, usually found on calm bodies of water; almost never on the ocean. Sometimes mixes loosely with other duck species. (source ebird.org)

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why did i puff my chest,

when i knew she wasn’t even looking

taíno-borikenaíki name from the word duck: yaguása; Spanish: pato

collection: winged portraitures

medium: acrylic on canvas

size: 5x7

About the hooded merganser

Small diving duck with thin serrated bill. Breeding males have showy black-and-white crest, a couple zebra stripes on the white breast, and cinnamon-colored sides. Females are brown with a puffy crest and partly yellow bill. Looks slender and long-necked in flight, with very fast wingbeats. Widespread across much of North America, but usually only seen in pairs or small flocks. Nests in cavities near small ponds or marshes; especially fond of wooded swamps. In winter, usually found on calm bodies of water; almost never on the ocean. Sometimes mixes loosely with other duck species. (source ebird.org)

why did i puff my chest,

when i knew she wasn’t even looking

taíno-borikenaíki name from the word duck: yaguása; Spanish: pato

collection: winged portraitures

medium: acrylic on canvas

size: 5x7

About the hooded merganser

Small diving duck with thin serrated bill. Breeding males have showy black-and-white crest, a couple zebra stripes on the white breast, and cinnamon-colored sides. Females are brown with a puffy crest and partly yellow bill. Looks slender and long-necked in flight, with very fast wingbeats. Widespread across much of North America, but usually only seen in pairs or small flocks. Nests in cavities near small ponds or marshes; especially fond of wooded swamps. In winter, usually found on calm bodies of water; almost never on the ocean. Sometimes mixes loosely with other duck species. (source ebird.org)