The Prince George Citizen

Volunteers back feeding ducks at Cottonwood Island Park

- CHRISTINE HINZMANN Citizen staff

As the cold sets in, hundreds of ducks are still at Cottonwood Island Park and so are the two volunteers who feed them daily to help keep the ducks alive during the harsh winter months when food is in short supply.

On any given day, there are as many as 200 ducks in the water located near the main parking lot of the popular park.

As Paul Cailleaux and Brock Bailey, volunteers, friends and longtime members of Ducks Unlimited, recently filled their buckets up with cracked corn and whole barley in preparatio­n to feed the ducks, passersby stop to thank them.

The need to feed the ducks during winter in Prince George started about five winters ago when there were reports that ducks were falling from the sky on First Avenue.The ducks literally dropped dead mid-flight.

Bailey examined the bodies and discovered the fowl were emaciated. They had starved to death.

The mandate of Ducks Unlimited is to conserve Canada’s wetlands so Cailleaux and Bailey honour that by supporting the water fowl that live in that habitat.

As the daily feeding took place late last week Cailleaux stayed up on the bridge and fed the ducks gathered under and near it while Bailey ventured out to the spots where the water meets the land.

Bailey would like to remind everyone to please not let their dogs chase the ducks as they are trying to avoid any extra expenditur­e of energy as they are just trying to survive the season.

“It’s going to be a long winter,” he added.

Bailey explained how the dominant birds will always eat first and it only takes a couple of them to make tracks towards the feed the rest will follow because they’re herd birds.

Bailey makes sure he spreads the feed far and wide so that the females and the few wood ducks that are with the mallards are able to feed, too. If the feed isn’t spread out the dominant males will chase all the others away.

In the early years, Cailleaux and Bailey would pay for the feed out of pocket but purchasing duck food for months at a time can get expensive so they reached out to the community for help and got a strong response. And people have already started to donate again but of course this is an ongoing process.

The ducks need as many as three 20 kg bags of food every day and Bailey and Cailleaux have both invested their own money so far and as others have donated food already, they are hoping more will help out and donate to the cause through Spruce Capital Feeds.

People can buy bags of whole barley and cracked corn for a little less than $20 each and then Cailleaux or Bailey will pick up the bags as needed.

“We really appreciate anything people can do to help us,” Bailey said.

 ?? CITIZEN PHOTO BY JAMES DOYLE/LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE ?? Every winter, Brock Bailey and Paul Cailleaux volunteer to feed the hundreds of ducks that over winter at Cottonwood Island Park.
CITIZEN PHOTO BY JAMES DOYLE/LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE Every winter, Brock Bailey and Paul Cailleaux volunteer to feed the hundreds of ducks that over winter at Cottonwood Island Park.
 ?? CITIZEN PHOTO BY JAMES DOYLE/ LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE ?? Brock Bailey spreads duck feed beside the water at Cottonwood Island Park last Wednesday morning.
CITIZEN PHOTO BY JAMES DOYLE/ LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE Brock Bailey spreads duck feed beside the water at Cottonwood Island Park last Wednesday morning.

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