WATERFOWL EGG SWAP

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rainbowrabbitry, are you claiming FarmrGirl's offer? This is a chain swap; someone posts an offer, the next person claims it and makes their own offer, the next someone claims that offer, and so on and so forth.

FarmrGirl, I got 1 duckling from the first batch of Welshies, and 6 eggs still going strong from the 2nd batch.
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I was unaware that this was a chain swap. I guess i skipped over that while reading the rules.

No i am not claiming an offer. Sorry for the confusion
 
i wont be able to play since they took PayPal away. :-( and I was told no more hatching anything!! But I was going to cheat and sneak a few more baby's in the house.
 
i wont be able to play since they took PayPal away. :-( and I was told no more hatching anything!! But I was going to cheat and sneak a few more baby's in the house.
You are welcome to PM anyone with anything you want & offer the paypal to them directly for their eggs. I'm sure most on here wouldn't have a problem with that.
 
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CURRENT OFFER
Oh, Silkie... I'm gonna save you but I don't have a lot to offer at the moment:

Mine on the 6 Hen's Choice (no muscovy please)

Offered:

6+ Welsh Harlequin Ducks (Holderread Line)

These ducks are such sweeties, so calm and happy they don't run away from me but come to me instead (I am the food lady after all). The girls great year round layers and are giving me an egg a day - these are some of my best over-all producers! These ladies have also shown a tendency toward broodiness and I even successfully relocated a nest last year that the little miss stuck right to like glue. As they are also excellent meat birds, too many drakes is not a bad problem to have.



Or

6+ White French Production Muscovy
This is a French improved breeding stock that produces birds 50% larger than our American Muscovy. Very quiet and calm, lay lots of nice big eggs Feb-Nov (then tend to go broody for winter), excellent foragers. Wonderful personalities for pets: boys are super sweethearts; girls are docile... also the best broodies & mamas! (35 day incubation). For meat production, drakes usually attain a live weight of 12 pounds in 12 weeks. My typical dressed weights: Hens 3.5- 4.5 lb. and drakes 8 - 10 lb. (most dress at 9 lbs). High in meat-to-bone ratio, with less weight loss after cooking than Pekin ducks. (I have 13 multigenerational girls covered by 2 drakes; mama's regularly hatch out 12-18 babies!)




Or

6+ Black Cayuga Ducks (Holderread Line) Ships in Late June

Outstandingly hardy, great foragers, and make excellent pets or meat (or both!) averaging 7-8 lbs live weight. These ducks aren't bothered a bit by the harsh winters of the northeast and the girls are good seasonal layers, giving me coal-black eggs early in the season which then fade to a dark grey-green. Mine haven't shown a strong desire to go broody so I usually stick the eggs under a broody Cochin.



Or

6+ Sex-Linked Tuxedo Dux Ships in late July

Our Tuxedo Dux are very attractive and distinctive with their solid plumage and white bib that creates a striking tuxedo pattern. They're relatively calm, great foragers, and produce a quality roasting duck. Drakes will weigh, on average, 7 pounds with hens 6 pounds, and will lay mostly white eggs but occasionally you'll get a girl who lays blue or gray tinted eggs. Males will express with black colored down and females will be either lilac or chocolate (they do not retain this sex-linked characteristic in future generations).
 
This is the current offer. Sorry for any confusion. Thanks!
Oh, Silkie... I'm gonna save you but I don't have a lot to offer at the moment:

Mine on the 6 Hen's Choice (no muscovy please)

Offered:

6+ Welsh Harlequin Ducks (Holderread Line)

These ducks are such sweeties, so calm and happy they don't run away from me but come to me instead (I am the food lady after all). The girls great year round layers and are giving me an egg a day - these are some of my best over-all producers! These ladies have also shown a tendency toward broodiness and I even successfully relocated a nest last year that the little miss stuck right to like glue. As they are also excellent meat birds, too many drakes is not a bad problem to have.



Or

6+ White French Production Muscovy
This is a French improved breeding stock that produces birds 50% larger than our American Muscovy. Very quiet and calm, lay lots of nice big eggs Feb-Nov (then tend to go broody for winter), excellent foragers. Wonderful personalities for pets: boys are super sweethearts; girls are docile... also the best broodies & mamas! (35 day incubation). For meat production, drakes usually attain a live weight of 12 pounds in 12 weeks. My typical dressed weights: Hens 3.5- 4.5 lb. and drakes 8 - 10 lb. (most dress at 9 lbs). High in meat-to-bone ratio, with less weight loss after cooking than Pekin ducks. (I have 13 multigenerational girls covered by 2 drakes; mama's regularly hatch out 12-18 babies!)




Or

6+ Black Cayuga Ducks (Holderread Line) Ships in Late June

Outstandingly hardy, great foragers, and make excellent pets or meat (or both!) averaging 7-8 lbs live weight. These ducks aren't bothered a bit by the harsh winters of the northeast and the girls are good seasonal layers, giving me coal-black eggs early in the season which then fade to a dark grey-green. Mine haven't shown a strong desire to go broody so I usually stick the eggs under a broody Cochin.



Or

6+ Sex-Linked Tuxedo Dux Ships in late July

Our Tuxedo Dux are very attractive and distinctive with their solid plumage and white bib that creates a striking tuxedo pattern. They're relatively calm, great foragers, and produce a quality roasting duck. Drakes will weigh, on average, 7 pounds with hens 6 pounds, and will lay mostly white eggs but occasionally you'll get a girl who lays blue or gray tinted eggs. Males will express with black colored down and females will be either lilac or chocolate (they do not retain this sex-linked characteristic in future generations).
 
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