A broody Khaki Campbell?

RavenStorm

Songster
11 Years
Jun 1, 2008
361
6
129
Southern CA
So, my baby has completely changed in behavior over this past month. She started laying eggs in January, but she acted the same way towards me that she had as a baby (loving, eager to see me, wanting to cuddle, wanting treats). There have been some changes around the backyard recently, and one of my other ducks got sick earlier this month (I have no idea with what though, and she recovered within a day), so I was thinking that they might have disrupted her or something and that was why she was acting different.

Now she acts like every time she sees me she is terrified. She quacks loudly (she stopped quacking, but not talking, back in November unless something scared her so quacking is strange for her at this point) when she sees me. Instead of standing up straight, she hunkers down and squishes her neck and head close to her body. Even though it's running about 85-95 degrees right now she fluffs up her feathers every time I come out there. She will sit on her egg all morning, but in the afternoon she gets out of the nest box and never goes back so I take the eggs.

Is she broody/partially broody? Does anyone have a link to a good video on their ducks that are acting broody so I can get a comparison?
 
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My girls SO BADLY need a boyfriend! Lol, it get's weird when my little nieces ask why one of my girl ducks is climbing on the back of the other. Oh, and why is she biting her now and wiggling her butt? I promised their mom I wouldn't explain it to them yet but dang it, I'm such a know-it-all that I feel compelled to answer with the truth!

I have been taking the eggs away every day because I want her to return to a normal behavior. Is there a way you can break broodieness out of a duck like with a chicken? I live in the suburbs and the noise is getting to the (so far) understanding neighbors. Also, now the other female duck is starting to act like my Khaki, can one duck influence another to go broody or is she just mimicking her?
 
LOL, to funny~ My drake humps my one chicken. That that's a weird site! He's beautiful also , so wish he would have some kids...lol

We got another duck and we have no clue breed or sex. I am hoping it's a female so Gary stops humping the chickens...LMAO:lol:

I even have a female muscovy duck coming up from the pond and i so want to put her in the backyard but she's wild and don't want to exspose my duck to her. I know she hears him!!!

Not sure if 2 different breeds can mate??

Have you eaten any of the ducks eggs yet?? Curious to their taste.
 
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Oh yeah we love their eggs. They eat the same feed as the chickens do (different rations/amounts though), so technically the taste is almost identical. They are richer though, because they have a lot more yolk, and the protein bonds are stronger in duck eggs so the texture is different.

Right now I have to take a Culinary Produce Technology class (I'm an agriculture major at my school) and there are a lot of future chefs and bakers in that class. One girl who is training to become a French pastry baker flipped when she found out I have laying ducks and buys a lot of them off of me. From an old master she studied under in France last year she learned that for baking the ideal eggs for her line of baking are unrefrigerated duck eggs, and a lot of French bakers and cooks feel the same way.
 
Oh, so if you DON"T want her to be broody (sorry I mistook your intention), I have read to remove her from any stimulus that helps promote broodiness. Like the nest box, and she shouldn't be inside a coop (until you have to let her in for predator protection. Darkness stimulates broodiness, full light helps break it. I guess it's too hot to take away all the shady spots, but that is one thing that is recommended. Corn raises her body temperature, which is a physiological stimulus for broodiness, so don't feed her any of that.
 

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