If your intention is to destroy the nest, yes you can get in trouble because Canadas are protected by the Migratory Bird Act. It is a felony. If you must remove the nest, you will need a permit and PLEASE bring the eggs to a wildlife rehabiltator (contact them first before approaching the nest) so he/she can raise them and release them into the wild.
But as a wildlife monitor for the past five years I urge you to let the eggs go full term. Do not move the mother or the father. Any type of aggression towards you by them will dissipate by the second week after the mother has sat down, and to ease tensions between you and a "nervous" goose dad, a peace offering of some corn, wheat bread or chopped fruit will make things much better.
In the community where I live, having a goose nest outside your business is considered good luck and the old wives tale is true. All the high grossing stores in our area have had nests at their doorways for the past three years.
The correct form would be "their geese's eggs," indicating that the eggs belong to multiple geese.
yes
yes
goodness no!
The answer is quite simple. The eggs are her children and they belong to her...much the way a human mother protects her children.
Yes. Geese move north to lay their eggs, and south for the winter.
A goose is a bird, not a mammal. Birds are characterized by feathers, beaks, and laying eggs, while mammals have fur or hair and give birth to live young.
Geese are oviparous. Oviparous means laying eggs that hatch. Viviparous means gestating offspring inside the body, like mammals, which geese do not do. Geese are birds, they lay eggs and hatch out their babies from them.
Geese are oviparous. Oviparous means laying eggs that hatch. Viviparous means gestating offspring inside the body, like mammals, which geese do not do. Geese are birds, they lay eggs and hatch out their babies from them.
No geeses is not a word the correct way to say it is geese eggs
yes
geese are good for weeding, grazing grass, eggs for backing they also made pretty good gaud dogs (geese?).