I drain & refill my ducks' kiddy pool every 1-2 days. I don't think they're very finicky as to the color/condition of the water, they love to dabble in the funkiest mud puddles in the yard anyway.
Someone here gave me the brilliant idea to install a bulkhead fitting at the bottom of the side of the pool, and attatch a faucet & hose fitting on the outside. So when I want to empty the pool I can turn the faucet and the dirty duck poop soup drains through the hose & far away into the garden bed. You just have to make sure the end of the hose is on a lower elevation than the bottom of the pool in order for it to drain.
Otherwise, you can set up a siphon to do the same thing. Place one end of the hose in a garden bed lower than the bottom of the pool. Put the other end of the hose in the dirty pool water. Take another hose hooked up to a faucet and run fresh water into the siphon hose while it's under the dirty water. Do that for a minute until there is water going through the siphon hose, then remove the fresh-water hose. You should feel the suction from the siphon hose going. It will now drain out your dirty pool water.
I prefer this method because it keeps the duck yard from becoming a swampy muddy mess with dumped pool water. It also saves my back and the plastic pool from the stress of lifting & dumping out the water.
I keep asking on FreeCycle for one of those good heavy-duty Little Tykes type pools, but until then the regular cheapo ones have been doing well.
We love our ducks and are glad to accomodate them!
Someone here gave me the brilliant idea to install a bulkhead fitting at the bottom of the side of the pool, and attatch a faucet & hose fitting on the outside. So when I want to empty the pool I can turn the faucet and the dirty duck poop soup drains through the hose & far away into the garden bed. You just have to make sure the end of the hose is on a lower elevation than the bottom of the pool in order for it to drain.
Otherwise, you can set up a siphon to do the same thing. Place one end of the hose in a garden bed lower than the bottom of the pool. Put the other end of the hose in the dirty pool water. Take another hose hooked up to a faucet and run fresh water into the siphon hose while it's under the dirty water. Do that for a minute until there is water going through the siphon hose, then remove the fresh-water hose. You should feel the suction from the siphon hose going. It will now drain out your dirty pool water.
I prefer this method because it keeps the duck yard from becoming a swampy muddy mess with dumped pool water. It also saves my back and the plastic pool from the stress of lifting & dumping out the water.
I keep asking on FreeCycle for one of those good heavy-duty Little Tykes type pools, but until then the regular cheapo ones have been doing well.
We love our ducks and are glad to accomodate them!
