Mike, I think this is a relatively rare phenomenon I observed in the US. I called it “kindergarten”. Canada geese lay up to some 8 eggs. Even if they all hatch, there is no such thing as a family with 52 goslings. Canada geese are organized into separate social organisms that are typically bigger than just one family. Those organisms have different sizes and different types of social organization, which can be more or less relaxed or strongly organized. Some of them can sometimes organize a “kindergarten” where some adult birds herd goslings of several families. It looks like those adult birds are organized in shifts. If you see a big place populated with those geese, you can find different social organisms in one place, with only one or two of them showing that “kindergarten” behavior. One group of geese probably can learn this behavior from another group, but I'm not so sure about it, as I observed such a change in behavior only once.
Yes, here we call it a gang brood or a creche. In the flock I watch, there are no shifts. There are 3 adult pairs who always have the goslings for the whole flock; round the clock for a month. They aggressively keep the rest of the parents away, even at night. It is as much a kidnapping as it is a cooperative thing.
@@mikesvideosofbeavers This is very interesting! And with the terminology you've explained, I can see some literature on this topic. Do you know if the “chaperon” geese are the parents of part of the goslings or not? Also, I saw that those “chaperon” geese keep the gosling group clearly separated and aggressively attack other birds if they approach, but I never knew that the attacked approaching birds are the parents. How can it even be determined? (Recognition of individual birds is quite difficult. I do have some experience: one day, I found a nest with a female of eggs and a male guarding the spot. We visited the nest with our family from time to time. When the goslings hatched, the birds apparently recognized us, despite the presence of many other people and Canada geese around, but for me to confirm that the parents were the same birds, it took considerable time comparing the photographs “before” and “after”.) Also, I find the notion of “kidnapping” quite weird. I always thought this crèche behavior is a winning strategy. And, after all, the biological parents make a lot more force than the “chaperon” geese...
@@Micro-Moo I can only speculate based on what I have observed. For sure the chaperone geese are parents to some of the goslings. Whether the geese they chase away are parents of some of them or not, I don't know, because as you say I can't ID any of them. But I suspect some of them are parents. At dusk I see geese trying to sneak in and get some of the goslings to sleep under them, but they get chased away. Seems like something a mother would do. One theory I read is that the dominant geese in the flock try to gather all the goslings for selfish reasons. If they form a gang brood, usually their own goslings will stay closer to them, and then there are a lot of goslings that aren't theirs on the perimeter, so that if a predator manages to get a gosling, it increases the odds for the dominant geese that their own goslings survive. Of course, that is just a theory. People can only watch and try to make inferences. The motivation and behaviour may all vary from flock to flock.
@@mikesvideosofbeavers Thank you for your answers. Even though the presence of parents among the chaperones is not 100% obvious, it seems natural. I also speculated based on my observation. I can indirectly confirm that behavior may vary from flock to flock because I found that the behaviors I observe can be very different. (I think what you call a “flock” is what I call a “social organism”. I try to make this distinction because there can be more than one social organism at the same spot (area at a river or a lake) populated by a much greater number of birds, which may look like a single flock at first glance.) After you've explained the domination factor, I can see how it may make some sense. Overall, I still tend to think that crèche behavior improves long-term survival through inclusive fitness of the entire set of goslings in a crèche, so it could be evolutionary progressive.
Canadian, Canadian Geese, are special. I have seen this behaviour several times in cities as widely separated as Nanaimo , Kelowna , Edmonton, Winnipeg, etc, my +60 years of life. We have climate. The geese have behaviour that helps them to survive in the Canadian environment And in Canada, as a Canadian symbol, they are unlikely to be mown down by irate drivers ... another aspect of the Canadian environment that helps Canadian Geese survive and thrive in our cities and climate.
They cannot be parents. I call this behavior “kindergarten”. The “chaperon” geese can be parents of a few of the goslings, but not all of them. Please see my big comment on the top level of comments. By the way, adult birds never leave anyone behind. They keep extremely close attention to the goslings they take care of, and they always remember who is who, and never mix up their goslings with other goslings.
Those are the Canadian citizens.😂😂😂😂😂😂😂mommy taking to school for school is near by they are not riding the school bus. The teachers feed them at school.
I love that traffic comes to a complete standstill when these magnificent creatures happen their way.
Yes. I will Watch A Flock of Canada Geese With 52 Goslings Cross The Street. And I will enjoy it.
It's so lovely to see the mother goose with her Goslings crossing the road.everything and everyone stops to have a good look.
It's so nice people still care to stop and let them cross without honking.
These geese do the honking. 😀
Нямам думи.
Какви умни животинки. ❤❤❤❤
So cute!!!😍
Thank you for sharing 🙏😊👍👍
Bless their little hearts ❤ Great video
Thanks for your hard work!
Cute gosling!
I love it!!! ❤️! Watching from Florida where we don't have 🦆 Geese! But Alligators do cross the road once in a while...
Mike,
I think this is a relatively rare phenomenon I observed in the US. I called it “kindergarten”. Canada geese lay up to some 8 eggs. Even if they all hatch, there is no such thing as a family with 52 goslings. Canada geese are organized into separate social organisms that are typically bigger than just one family. Those organisms have different sizes and different types of social organization, which can be more or less relaxed or strongly organized. Some of them can sometimes organize a “kindergarten” where some adult birds herd goslings of several families. It looks like those adult birds are organized in shifts. If you see a big place populated with those geese, you can find different social organisms in one place, with only one or two of them showing that “kindergarten” behavior.
One group of geese probably can learn this behavior from another group, but I'm not so sure about it, as I observed such a change in behavior only once.
Yes, here we call it a gang brood or a creche. In the flock I watch, there are no shifts. There are 3 adult pairs who always have the goslings for the whole flock; round the clock for a month. They aggressively keep the rest of the parents away, even at night. It is as much a kidnapping as it is a cooperative thing.
@@mikesvideosofbeavers This is very interesting! And with the terminology you've explained, I can see some literature on this topic. Do you know if the “chaperon” geese are the parents of part of the goslings or not? Also, I saw that those “chaperon” geese keep the gosling group clearly separated and aggressively attack other birds if they approach, but I never knew that the attacked approaching birds are the parents. How can it even be determined?
(Recognition of individual birds is quite difficult. I do have some experience: one day, I found a nest with a female of eggs and a male guarding the spot. We visited the nest with our family from time to time. When the goslings hatched, the birds apparently recognized us, despite the presence of many other people and Canada geese around, but for me to confirm that the parents were the same birds, it took considerable time comparing the photographs “before” and “after”.)
Also, I find the notion of “kidnapping” quite weird. I always thought this crèche behavior is a winning strategy. And, after all, the biological parents make a lot more force than the “chaperon” geese...
@@Micro-Moo I can only speculate based on what I have observed. For sure the chaperone geese are parents to some of the goslings. Whether the geese they chase away are parents of some of them or not, I don't know, because as you say I can't ID any of them. But I suspect some of them are parents. At dusk I see geese trying to sneak in and get some of the goslings to sleep under them, but they get chased away. Seems like something a mother would do. One theory I read is that the dominant geese in the flock try to gather all the goslings for selfish reasons. If they form a gang brood, usually their own goslings will stay closer to them, and then there are a lot of goslings that aren't theirs on the perimeter, so that if a predator manages to get a gosling, it increases the odds for the dominant geese that their own goslings survive. Of course, that is just a theory. People can only watch and try to make inferences. The motivation and behaviour may all vary from flock to flock.
@@mikesvideosofbeavers Thank you for your answers. Even though the presence of parents among the chaperones is not 100% obvious, it seems natural. I also speculated based on my observation. I can indirectly confirm that behavior may vary from flock to flock because I found that the behaviors I observe can be very different. (I think what you call a “flock” is what I call a “social organism”. I try to make this distinction because there can be more than one social organism at the same spot (area at a river or a lake) populated by a much greater number of birds, which may look like a single flock at first glance.)
After you've explained the domination factor, I can see how it may make some sense. Overall, I still tend to think that crèche behavior improves long-term survival through inclusive fitness of the entire set of goslings in a crèche, so it could be evolutionary progressive.
Canadian, Canadian Geese, are special. I have seen this behaviour several times in cities as widely separated as Nanaimo , Kelowna , Edmonton, Winnipeg, etc, my +60 years of life. We have climate. The geese have behaviour that helps them to survive in the Canadian environment And in Canada, as a Canadian symbol, they are unlikely to be mown down by irate drivers ... another aspect of the Canadian environment that helps Canadian Geese survive and thrive in our cities and climate.
I loved this, thanks. Did anyone else provide dialogue for the one almost left behind, and the worried parents?
They cannot be parents. I call this behavior “kindergarten”. The “chaperon” geese can be parents of a few of the goslings, but not all of them. Please see my big comment on the top level of comments. By the way, adult birds never leave anyone behind. They keep extremely close attention to the goslings they take care of, and they always remember who is who, and never mix up their goslings with other goslings.
Aww! I love a baby goose parade. So cuuuute!
Que país Canadá no he tenido oportunidad de ir, pero he leido mucho y es educado, hay respeto, sensibilidad. Grscias.
❤❤
Gosling sitting 😮
❤❤❤
That’s crazy to look after so many
Wow that's a lot 😅
is this saskatoon?
Yes it is
Wow I hope they will be okay until they all go south for winter time!!!
Isso que é confiança em Deus .........😊😂,😃😃😃
❤🪿🐤🐤🐤🪿🐤🐤🐤🪿👍👏👏👏💕💕💕🤗🌺🌺
Those are the Canadian citizens.😂😂😂😂😂😂😂mommy taking to school for school is near by they are not riding the school bus. The teachers feed them at school.
عبورگله بک بک هاازخیابان وتوقف کامل خودروها
❤❤