Tag Archives: northern pintail duck

Northern Pintails at Pea Island NWR

While watching the Snow Geese at the Pea Island NWR, a whole flock of Pintail Ducks flew in and started foraging in the mud flats right in front of me!
Once again, I was captivated by the moment as these normally shy ducks paid little attention to the group as we stood on the shore taking photos 🙂


Adorned in that sharp plumage of grey, chocolate brown, black and white, Northern Pintails are arguably one of the most elegant species of duck found in the United States.
Though only the drakes sport their namesake pin shaped tail, the hens are quite lovely too dressed in a warm buff brown plumage with an intricate black scalloped pattern on their sides.

Like other dabbling ducks, Northern Pintails can be found looking for a meal in fresh and brackish water wetland areas like marshes, ponds, rivers, lakes, and sheltered estuaries.
They may also be spotted in the open waters of bays and lakes far away from vegetated shorelines which is a bit unusual.
Often seen tipping upside down underwater, they feed primarily on aquatic plants, seeds, and grass but will eat small aquatic animals, and insects when available.



The Northern Pintail is a wintertime resident of North Carolina and may be seen in varying numbers in our eastern coastal counties from late August to early April.
In a few months they’ll be off to migrate north to their summer breeding grounds in Alaska, Canada and the Great Plains.
Get out there and enjoy them while you can!

Photos by @sally_siko of @birdwatching_nc on the fabulous full frame @canonusa
#5Ds

Wintertime birding at Pea Island: Northern Pintail Duck

Check out these Northern Pintails! Aren’t they cool looking?




Pintails are unique looking birds and IMO are quite beautiful.
The drakes are easy to identify when swimming amongst large mixed flocks with their chestnut colored heads and namesake pointy tails.

The Northern Pintail boasts the widest range of any other duck seen in the United States. They are found on every continent except Antarctica, and are known to winter and breed on all continents except for Australia and Antarctica.


During the wintertime, large flocks of Pintail can be seen at many of our coastal refuge regions here in North Carolina, such as
Bodie and Pea islands in the Outer Banks,
Lake Mattamuskeet, Pungo Lake, the Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge, and parts of Pamlico Sound.



A surface feeding duck, they dine on aquatic plants, seeds, grass, small aquatic animals, and insects. Their long elegant necks enable them to reach deeper than other dabbling ducks for seeds, roots and tubers of underwater plants. During the wintertime, they’re also commonly spotted in eastern North Carolina feeding on the leftover grains found open farm fields situated near water.

They will stick around here until late April and will return next September once more to spend the winter in the Tarheel State.
Aren’t they lovely?

Photos by @sally_siko of @birdwatching_nc on the fabulous full frame @canonusa
#5Ds