It is so good to hear that Phoebe is doing so well! But very soon you will have three little Dervishes spookin' around your house, i'm afraid you won't get any sleep at all!
Stink-Bugs!!! - Don't get me started… It is getting cold outside and those pesky beasts like the warmth too, so they all like to come inside. In the mornings the window-screens are covered in stink-bugs, it looks like in one of the 60's horror movies. Luckily, you're right: The ducks love to eat them and fortunately they have no influence on the taste of the eggs,
Another benefit of having ducks here is that the ticks have disappeared! In 2018, before we had our first ducks i had 5-10 ticks crawling all over me after mowing the grass around the house, nowadays - zero! - Ok i also don't have to mow so much grass around the house, because the ducks eat the grass to, and what they don't eat they trample flat.
I have a funny duck story too: One of my barnyard surprise ducks went through a really, really rough molt this year, her wings and her back were partially bald and that poor girl was most of the day standing in a sunny spot, or when the weather was bad in a protected corner close by the house, one leg tucked away, neck retracted between her shoulders just looking pathetic!
Me, feeling so sorry for her started to speak to her in German: »Oh du arme Ente, ist dir so kalt?« (Oh, you poor duck, you feel so cold?) After which she responds with the saddest quack i have ever heart from a duck. I felt so sorry for her that i gave her some extra protein (cat-food), so that her feathers would grow back a little faster. - Next day, repeat…
Fast forward to today, her feathers have grown back and she looks like a normal duck until she spots me outside: She quickly plushes up her feathers, retracts her neck and slowly walks towards me, sounding that sad, heartbreaking quack, looking sad at me, expecting some additional protein. And when i call her »Arme Ente« (Poor duck) she even pulls her head a little deeper between her shoulders and looks even more pathetic, all accompanied wit that sad quack! - I was not far away from bursting out laughing today!
Who knew that ducks are clever enough to become imposters!
I really need to make a video of her, but she is too clever to do that when i'm holding my phone. Don't leave any evidence…
Life mealworms? - I tried that only once and barely survived! I guess they would walk voluntarily into the turkey roaster for life meal-worms. I will definitely start to farm meal-worms in the future, in the not so near future,…
For next spring i plan to build two raised beds, connected with concrete reinforcement mesh to form something like a hoophouse and then plant sweet potatoes into the beds. Ducks love to eat the sweet potato leaves! - And my wife loves baked sweet potatoes! (so do the ducks...)
Or maybe one bed with sweet potatoes and the second one with chick-peas?
As alway, i have too many plans and not enough time.
Stink-Bugs!!! - Don't get me started… It is getting cold outside and those pesky beasts like the warmth too, so they all like to come inside. In the mornings the window-screens are covered in stink-bugs, it looks like in one of the 60's horror movies. Luckily, you're right: The ducks love to eat them and fortunately they have no influence on the taste of the eggs,
Another benefit of having ducks here is that the ticks have disappeared! In 2018, before we had our first ducks i had 5-10 ticks crawling all over me after mowing the grass around the house, nowadays - zero! - Ok i also don't have to mow so much grass around the house, because the ducks eat the grass to, and what they don't eat they trample flat.

I have a funny duck story too: One of my barnyard surprise ducks went through a really, really rough molt this year, her wings and her back were partially bald and that poor girl was most of the day standing in a sunny spot, or when the weather was bad in a protected corner close by the house, one leg tucked away, neck retracted between her shoulders just looking pathetic!
Me, feeling so sorry for her started to speak to her in German: »Oh du arme Ente, ist dir so kalt?« (Oh, you poor duck, you feel so cold?) After which she responds with the saddest quack i have ever heart from a duck. I felt so sorry for her that i gave her some extra protein (cat-food), so that her feathers would grow back a little faster. - Next day, repeat…
Fast forward to today, her feathers have grown back and she looks like a normal duck until she spots me outside: She quickly plushes up her feathers, retracts her neck and slowly walks towards me, sounding that sad, heartbreaking quack, looking sad at me, expecting some additional protein. And when i call her »Arme Ente« (Poor duck) she even pulls her head a little deeper between her shoulders and looks even more pathetic, all accompanied wit that sad quack! - I was not far away from bursting out laughing today!
Who knew that ducks are clever enough to become imposters!
I really need to make a video of her, but she is too clever to do that when i'm holding my phone. Don't leave any evidence…
Life mealworms? - I tried that only once and barely survived! I guess they would walk voluntarily into the turkey roaster for life meal-worms. I will definitely start to farm meal-worms in the future, in the not so near future,…
For next spring i plan to build two raised beds, connected with concrete reinforcement mesh to form something like a hoophouse and then plant sweet potatoes into the beds. Ducks love to eat the sweet potato leaves! - And my wife loves baked sweet potatoes! (so do the ducks...)
Or maybe one bed with sweet potatoes and the second one with chick-peas?
As alway, i have too many plans and not enough time.