On this day two years ago, I photographed this immature male Common Goldeneye with a catfish at the pond in my neighborhood. It was a chilly, wintry afternoon. There were several Common Goldeneyes on the pond. This one caught my eye because it appeared to be playing with its food.

Immature male Common Goldeneye with a catfish, Salt Lake County, UtahImmature male Common Goldeneye with a catfish – Nikon D500, f7.1, 1/1250, ISO 500, Nikkor 500mm VR with 1.4x TC, natural light

I never got the best light angle on both the small catfish and the immature male Common Goldeneye but this image was the closest. There was good light on the face of the young diving duck and the fish.

The immature Common Goldeneye repeatedly dropped the catfish back into the water, recaptured it, and tossed it around in its bill. I am not sure of the duck was playing or whether he was just trying to get the fish at the right angle so he could swallow the fish without being hurt by its barbs.

I never did see if the young male Common Goldeneye swallowed the catfish because I got distracted by an adult drake Common Goldeneye who started displaying a bit further out in the water.  The white cheek patch was just beginning to show on this first winter drake.

Over the shoulder look from a male Common Goldeneye, Salt Lake County, UtahOver the shoulder look from a male Common Goldeneye – Nikon D500, f7.1, 1/2000, ISO 500, Nikkor 500mm VR with 1.4x TC, natural light

This bonus photo of an adult drake Common Goldeneye giving me an over the shoulder look is the male that had started to show a courtship display. He stopped his courtship display right after his behavior caught my attention. I liked this image so much though that I wanted to include it this morning. This photo also shows how different immature and adult drake Common Goldeneyes can look.

Life is good.

Mia

Click here to see more of my Common Goldeneye photos plus facts and information about this species.