- Thread starter
- #11
Hey everybody, sorry I didn't update for a week, end of semester rolls by and that means work...
Also there wasn't much to tell about my broody except that she was still sitting on the eggs with no result.
Yesterday I took out the last egg. Two more had disappeared and when mother duck took a break I took a close look at the last egg. It smelled bad and I could see large, brownish spots beneath the shell. I concluded that nothing will ever come out of this one so I threw it away. When mother duck returned she appeared confused but decidet to stay on the nest...For a split second I thought about giving her some recently laid runner eggs, but she has been sitting on that nest for almost six weeks now and another four are just too much in my opinion. Not to mention that I already have eleven ducks right now so no ducklings is somewhat disappointing but certainly a relief...
I guess the shed was just overcrowded and something, not sure whether it was the crows, the magpies that like to hang out in our yard or some kind of thieving mammal ( maybe I should lay out some rat poison just to be sure...) took the eggs.
Well, there's always a new breeding season.
Also there wasn't much to tell about my broody except that she was still sitting on the eggs with no result.
Yesterday I took out the last egg. Two more had disappeared and when mother duck took a break I took a close look at the last egg. It smelled bad and I could see large, brownish spots beneath the shell. I concluded that nothing will ever come out of this one so I threw it away. When mother duck returned she appeared confused but decidet to stay on the nest...For a split second I thought about giving her some recently laid runner eggs, but she has been sitting on that nest for almost six weeks now and another four are just too much in my opinion. Not to mention that I already have eleven ducks right now so no ducklings is somewhat disappointing but certainly a relief...
I guess the shed was just overcrowded and something, not sure whether it was the crows, the magpies that like to hang out in our yard or some kind of thieving mammal ( maybe I should lay out some rat poison just to be sure...) took the eggs.
Well, there's always a new breeding season.
