
Archived
Cinnamon Teal - Coloured Coin (2015)
2015
Mintage 17,500
Archived
Cinnamon Teal - Coloured Coin (2015)
2015
Mintage 17,500
$20.99 USD
Masters Club:
300
Status: CAN & US shipping only
Availability:
Out of stock in stores
About
Vibrant colour on an extra-large 25-cent coin! Order today!
The diminutive cinnamon teal (Anas cyanoptera) is a dabbling that lives in southwestern Canada, the western United States, and across western South America. It is unique for having two separate North American and South American populations. It also generally avoids breeding in the mid-continental prairie region—an otherwise popular breeding ground for dabbling ducks.
Approximately 40 centimetres long and weighing about 400grams, the male has a cinnamon-coloured head and body with light blue patches on its upper wings. The trailing edge of their wings is iridescent green. It also has bright red eyes. The females are brownish grey with red undertones and have a dark bill and dark eyes. Like the males, the females have patches of light blue on their upper wings. Immature males bearthe same colouring as females, but have red eyes.
In western Canada, cinnamon teals summer in wetlands, including marshes, ponds, and small lakes. Generally choosing a new mate each season, they nest near water in small grass-lined depressions that are well camouflaged by layers of vegetation. The female works her way through this protective camouflage to get to hernest. Here, she will lay a clutch of up to 16 ivory-coloured eggs. At the end of the season, the ducks migrate to Mexico, California, and Arizona.
Your coin is the perfect gift for a friend or family who enjoys birds or nature.
Special features:
• The cinnamon teal is the fifth coin in the Royal Canadian Mint's popular Ducksof Canada series.
• Highly popular with bird watchers, duck hunters and colored coin admirers.
• Artist Denis Mayer Jr. is a renowned conservationist and member of Artists for Conservation.
• Celebrate the beauty of Canada's waterfowl with a male and female cinnamon teal in their natural habitat on a beautifully coloured cupronickel coin.
About the Design:
The reverse design by Canadian artist Denis Mayer Jr. features a coloured male and female cinnamon teal in their natural habitat. In the foreground on the rightside of the image, the stunning crimson male with his striking red eye and characteristic patch of light blue on his wing-front wades in a pond near a swimming female. The female, with gray-brown colouring and dark eye stripe, bobs gently in the water just behind the male on the left side of the composition. Alovely white water lily and bright green lily pad float in the foreground. The entire image is reflected in the rippling water.
Did you know…
• Like all dabbling ducks, cinnamon teals feedon aquatic vegetation, invertebrates, and molluscs with their long spatula-like bills.
• Cinnamon teals sometimes interbreed with blue-winged teals.
• Female cinnamon teals and blue-winged teals bear such close resemblance that they are difficult to identify even by experienced bird-watchers.
Packaging:
Your coin is encapsulated and presented in a Royal Canadian Mint-branded maroon clamshell with black beauty box.
Order your coin today!
Approximately 40 centimetres long and weighing about 400grams, the male has a cinnamon-coloured head and body with light blue patches on its upper wings. The trailing edge of their wings is iridescent green. It also has bright red eyes. The females are brownish grey with red undertones and have a dark bill and dark eyes. Like the males, the females have patches of light blue on their upper wings. Immature males bearthe same colouring as females, but have red eyes.
In western Canada, cinnamon teals summer in wetlands, including marshes, ponds, and small lakes. Generally choosing a new mate each season, they nest near water in small grass-lined depressions that are well camouflaged by layers of vegetation. The female works her way through this protective camouflage to get to hernest. Here, she will lay a clutch of up to 16 ivory-coloured eggs. At the end of the season, the ducks migrate to Mexico, California, and Arizona.
Your coin is the perfect gift for a friend or family who enjoys birds or nature.
Special features:
• The cinnamon teal is the fifth coin in the Royal Canadian Mint's popular Ducksof Canada series.
• Highly popular with bird watchers, duck hunters and colored coin admirers.
• Artist Denis Mayer Jr. is a renowned conservationist and member of Artists for Conservation.
• Celebrate the beauty of Canada's waterfowl with a male and female cinnamon teal in their natural habitat on a beautifully coloured cupronickel coin.
About the Design:
The reverse design by Canadian artist Denis Mayer Jr. features a coloured male and female cinnamon teal in their natural habitat. In the foreground on the rightside of the image, the stunning crimson male with his striking red eye and characteristic patch of light blue on his wing-front wades in a pond near a swimming female. The female, with gray-brown colouring and dark eye stripe, bobs gently in the water just behind the male on the left side of the composition. Alovely white water lily and bright green lily pad float in the foreground. The entire image is reflected in the rippling water.
Did you know…
• Like all dabbling ducks, cinnamon teals feedon aquatic vegetation, invertebrates, and molluscs with their long spatula-like bills.
• Cinnamon teals sometimes interbreed with blue-winged teals.
• Female cinnamon teals and blue-winged teals bear such close resemblance that they are difficult to identify even by experienced bird-watchers.
Packaging:
Your coin is encapsulated and presented in a Royal Canadian Mint-branded maroon clamshell with black beauty box.
Order your coin today!
Specifications
Product Number
132478
Mintage
17,500
Composition
cupronickel
Embellishment
Coloured
Weight
13.7 g
Edge
plain
Certificate
serialized
Face Value
25 cents
Finish
specimen
Artist
Denis Mayer Jr. (reverse), Susanna Blunt (obverse)
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