I've got a mean mallard drake, too. And nope, he never does learn to get along with those he picks on. With our two girls, he will mate with one (as gentle as a drake ever mates), with the other, he will mount her, but it is only for dominance. He'll tear at her neck and back, and never...
Our ducks used to get Blue Seal, which is made by Kent, in pellet form. We have gotten shipped the regional Kent product, but only have found that in crumble form. Which they'll eat, but they seem to spill a lot more of it, and little birds steal it. And that's running low for us.
We've yet...
Us and the ducks are newly moved to the St. Louis area, and their normal duck food is just not available in this area. (We've called all the stores and the manufacturer, and no dice; their normal preferred food just isn't available out here.)
We need a good maintenance diet for our mallard...
I've dug around online, and scoured old posts here, but I haven't found any good answers yet.
We've moved our ducks (and ourselves for that matter) from more rural sections of Massachusetts to urban St. Louis. But to make up for that, in their new home, the ducks have their pond inside their...
Subject says it all. Tomorrow I start moving myself and my ducks from Massachusetts to Missouri. Health certificates and import license are in hand. But, I expect that I will be stopping around the half way point, somewhere off of 71 or I70, near Columbus, Ohio.
Anyone every have any...
Our blue and black Swedish girls, Moneypenny and Domino, are turning three this July. So, this is there 3rd season of egg laying.
Season 1, they started late February, both close to each other in time. There'd be an egg, and maybe they'd skip a day, two tops, but then they got going and...
In the Spring, we'll be moving from more rural northern Massachusetts to more urban St. Louis. Going from ~5 acres of land (75% of which are woods) to 0.4 acres, pretty flat and manicured. Interestingly enough, our new neighborhood not only will allow us to house a duck (in the backyard, with...
Luckily I am married to a vet with federal accreditation. But she just called the Missouri Dept. of Agriculture, and it's even more complicated than the certificate! They need a pullorum test (easy, can be done at home) and an avian flu test (more difficult – requires a lab), and then they...
...setup where they could all nest next to each other with a screen inbetween, but we absolutely could not let them be free together. (And we have a *lot* of space in our yard.)
So, if the sexes were all reversed, you could probably get away with what you have. That many drakes with one...
Hello All-
Well, it looks like sometime in the Spring we will be moving from our home in Massachusetts to the St. Louis area. That's about a two and a half day drive for us (a brief drive to a siblings house in New York, and then an ~9 hour drive and one overnight stay somewhere around...
Hmmm. Good point. There's not a lot of evidence of molting yet, but it's about time for that to start happening. (The one mallard drake we still have is definitely into his molting plumage, and he's starting to drop his feathers.)
They've also been ravenous for greens, more so then usual...
Having started with Mallard drakes, we've had two Swedish hens for 15 months now. This is our first egg laying season. The girls started in mid-February, and despite the brutal heat of this summer, they've only skipped a few days here and there. By my count, they've each laid about 190 eggs...
...buy are perfectly harmless to ducks. 2) Will the ducks love it too much? This wasn't a problem when we had just mallards, but our Swedish girls *love* vegetables. The dock is a very pretty, leafy plant that does fabulously in the bog, but since getting the girls, I have to put a big cage...
You're definitely getting beyond my engineering knowledge at this point :) But as a guess, I imagine you could run a siphon off of your big pond, and run that to the float valve in the filter. Our pond is not filled under high pressure – it's attached to our outdoor faucet by a fairly small...
I think the issue with depth is just to go deep enough so that the pond doesn't freeze solid down to the bottom in the winter. I think there will be less wear and tear on the liner if it doesn't freeze solid. 1 1/2 feet is too shallow (the water in the filter tank will freeze solid – we...
Again, check with your town about regulations. Once you hit ~3 ft. deep, many towns will consider that to be a pool, tax it as such, and require it to have a fence around it. Ours is 2 1/2 feet, and is therefore considered just a landscaping feature. And 2 1/2 ft was sufficiently deep not to...
They *love* chasing fish in the pond. You can go to any pet store and get feeder fish (our store has two sizes: either small or large comets), and the ducks will go nuts for them, chasing them in the pond. (Our mallard can circle the pond several times underwater chasing them.) It usually...
www.pondcreationsbysean.com :)
He banged that pond out in three days. I think my wife and I could have done it, but it would have been pretty much a whole summer of weekends.
Basically it's a hole dug in the ground, with any large rocks removed, and smooth clean dirt built up on one side...
First time lady duck owner (we've had mallard drakes for a few years now).
Moneypenny, our Blue Swedish and a hair over a year old, has been laying an egg a day, with a one day exception long ago, since mid February. But, she seems to have stopped for two days now.
She's still waggling her...
...shell is thicker, with a noticeable inner membrane. And the whites have a more viscous quality to them (although oddly enough, I find the whites *much* harder to whip into stiff peaks than store bought chicken eggs – although I'm not sure that's the "duck" nature or the freshness at work)...