Do geese fly away???

Tomatoes are a ducks favorite treat! Apples and watermelon come in a close 2nd.Remember always feed Organic Veggies !!!
 
Tomatoes are a ducks favorite treat! Apples and watermelon come in a close 2nd.Remember always feed Organic Veggies !!!
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Definete 100% answer it all depends on your goose

I have four beautiful American buffs, all of which an fly to a degree. I have 2 females and 2 males .

My males can fly well enough get up about 5 feet from the ground and fly over 4 acres ( the pond ) but they don't fly like Canada geese they fly in a complete horizontal line it looks like , there feet don't go up or straight down they are like glued to the sides and and stretched out like they were we'll streching .

My females can fly a bit but not as well as the males even though they are smaller.

Anyway I think it's halarious because sometimes a male will get brave and try to fly withstood wild geese then he'll like run into a hill and I'll laugh because there domesticated geese and to fat to really fly away.
 
Tomatoes are a ducks favorite treat! Apples and watermelon come in a close 2nd.Remember always feed Organic Veggies !!!




But what about some vitamins for health, those aren't organic neither is strt and grow which seems to be almost essential for ducklings it's not 100 % organic.

Not arguing I'm just adding, I do agree with organic diets.
 
Our Am buff geese have been encouraged to fly by our heeler pup. She loves to race them underneath to meet them when they land. The adults, both male & female, take off from the top of the hill and have since learned to turn in the air to remain on our/'their' property. Fully free range, they have no thought of leaving, tolerating more herding than they would prefer. Basically they work hard to fly, maintaining a glide at original takeoff height, essentially 35ft or so over the valley.
 
Our Am buff geese have been encouraged to fly by our heeler pup. She loves to race them underneath to meet them when they land. The adults, both male & female, take off from the top of the hill and have since learned to turn in the air to remain on our/'their' property. Fully free range, they have no thought of leaving, tolerating more herding than they would prefer. Basically they work hard to fly, maintaining a glide at original takeoff height, essentially 35ft or so over the valley.
I bet that's pretty too.

Welcome to BYC @hazelbuff
 

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