We currently have 5 ducks free range on our pond. We throw cracked corn out for them in the AM. They are not tame at all. There are 2 female pekins, 1 mallard, 1 khaki campbell, and one I have no idea but is also a drake. They give the poor Pekins no rest.
We also had 4 geese free range as well. However, the females got the roaming bug and would take the flock wandering across the street. One female we found dead near the pond one morning. Possibly eggbound. The other unfortunately got hit by a car crossing the road.
So one of the poor harassed Pekin hens decided she is now a goose. The ganders protect her from the drakes and they don't feel so lonely anymore.
We have been unable to find any eggs despite our search of the pond edge and the woods where we have seen them wander. There ages are unknown so it's possible they are just too old to lay.
We have 6 babies that we are getting ready to join the flock on the pond. One more Pekin (female I believe as it has no drake feather and isn't too horse of a quack), a Female Rouen, what I thought were 2 Cayugas, but could be a Cayuga and a Black Runner, no Drake feathers at 8 weeks but they seem very deep and throaty. A chocolate runner that is 7 weeks, very quiet no idea on sex. And a female something - she has the best quack of them all Black and white with a very spotty head, white with black spots. No muscovy beak.
We have 3 dogs that LOVE LOVE LOVE to chase the geese and ducks. It's a straight run downhill to the 1acre pond where they live. They stay close to the water, and always make it into the water faster than the dogs can get to them.
Any time a dog is caught chasing, it gets a fast toss as far out into the pond as we can heave them. Let me tell you, the dog remembers for a good solid week that chasing is a bad idea. Now the chickens are in the goat pen. The ducks are just funny to the dogs, but they want to eat the chickens.
I'm hoping to get eggs from the new generation. We plan to finish up the fencing as soon as the post pounder is connected to the tractor and then the house will have a fenced off backyard. Then the chasing will be over. (and the entertainment of the dog toss)
We try to be as organic and close to nature as we can. The chickens free range, but we lock them in at night. The ducks though, we let them be. They are bigger than most of the hawks who have shown up here would want to grab. The water gives them protection from a lot of the ground predators.
Laney