On my way to class the other morning, as I crossed a bridge over the Neckar River, I glanced over to the part of the river on the opposite side of the bridge. There I spotted the largest group of swans I’ve ever seen all in one place. They were emerging from the heavy fog that was still hovering over the Neckar River.
I have been amazed that there are always quite a few swans swimming around on the Neckar, usually they are spread out in different places, with only a few in any one location at a time. But I guess I spotted them just as they headed off to “work” — their work being posing for all the tourists taking photos of them, of course. I had time for only a few quick photos before dashing off so I wasn’t late to class.
Note that the swans were all on the move the whole time. Maybe they were running late, too. 😉 Anyway, that fact, combined with the fog, puts the swans in kind of “soft” focus in these photos – it’s not any effect I applied later on the computer.
BTW, I’ve titled this post a “bevy of swans”. “bevy” in English can mean a group of like things in general (a bevy of girls, a bevy of deer, etc.). According to some online dictionaries, bevy is also the proper term to use for a group of swans in particular; e.g. you have a gaggle of geese, a flock of birds, and a bevy of swans.
However, other online references say that a group of swans is a “herd”. Is it just me, or do other native speakers associate “herd” with animals that have 4 legs?
But anyway, it was a big bunch of swans swimming on the Neckar, whatever you really call that. The one thing I know that it was not was a “wedge” – that’s term used for swans in flight. The fascinating things one find out when reading dictionaries online…
A group of crows is called a murder. At least a herd sounds better. But somehow herd sounds too harsh for the graceful looking swan.
Maybe the swans were getting ready to perform in the 12 Days of Christmas.:) Tis the season after all.
OK Linda, being ever the “I will see for myself!!! person, I too looked on the web and found a wonderful site that has bevy, herd and wedge for swans listed, as well as a lot of other groups of fauna animal kingdom words. the link is http://www.rinkworks.com/words/collective.shtml
Enjoy all you language lovers!!!
The only thing more impressive than a bevy of swans is to see one flying through the air! (which I did in Scituate, Mass.)
I love that last photo. It looks so much like a painting from the Naturalist (I guess) era of landscape painting.
Thanks! I think all the swans all together like that reminded me of a painting, simply because I’d never seen such a grouping of them in real life before!