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I give them their first drink of water as soon as I put them in the brooder. Then, I sprinkle a little bit of food in the water for them to dabble at before I introduce dry food. When I do introduce the dry food, I sprinkle a bit of on in the floor, around the bowl. They'll start nibbling on the food on the floor out of curiosity, and then they're realize it's yummy and go looking for more of it in the bowl.
And yikes! That incubator DOES look wet (and the duckling sure is cute!
)! I'm going to tell you what I do with all my duck eggs, which won't necessarily work for you or anyone else, but it works for me so I always try to throw it out there as an option: I run my incubators DRY. That's right - no water until hatch time, unless the air cells look too big beforehand (which has only happened once, last summer during a drought). At hatch time, I crank the humidity up to about 70-80% - enough so that there's condensation on the incubator walls. However, even at THAT level, the egg cartons that I set the eggs in to hatch never look that wet. They might feel slightly damp to the touch, but they look dry. Does your incubator have some vents that you can open up to let some humidity out?
gryeyes - Sounds like Black Bibbed. The bib isn't necessarily clearly defined - for a show quality bird, you would want a nice, crisp, teardrop-shaped bib with clean edges, but the pet-quality ones are rarely marked as perfectly. With Bibbed Calls, you'll often see the white bib "leaking" up onto the face, around the bill and the eyes. They could possibly be part of a Black Magpie project as well.