Duck, Goose.. Or neither?

Duck, Goose.. Or neither?


  • Total voters
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My experience with geese has been mainly bad. I don't know what the others do to keep them sweet, but if you can manage that they might be nice pets. I see them as messy attack ducks that are 3x the size with 10x the mean bits. It's been the case with geese raised by multiple people. Some of them were super sweet until they hit puberty, some were just mean. This goes for both sexes all times of the year. Both people eventually sold out of them because they were just too much. They weren't new poultry people either and I did not see anything wrong with the manner of handling or any weakness in body language that would incite aggression. With adults it was more of a nuisance, but I have seen them knock down children and go after their heads. No, no nests were involved.

Ducks, on the other hand, are awesome. I have yet to encounter a mean one, well, except the broody half-mallard on my neighbour's pond. I own 9 of them right now and they just make me smile to watch them. Winter water is a bit of a pain, but hey, they're waterfowl & I'm willing to go to a bit of work to be able to keep them. I have ducks from all classes except heavy, I think... or maybe I do have one heavy. I'm forgetting. They're all super sweet.
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Two of my lovely girls, Brooke and Hailey.

Edit: I see Aurora said her ducks were skittish. I have had really skittish ducks in the past, but all the ones I've acquired recently are the sweetest things. I don't know why, maybe because I spend a lot of time with them after maturity & don't force handling whilst young? I find ducks tame differently than chickens and prefer to make contact on their own terms. With chickens you just hold them more---with ducks you hold them less. That doesn't mean ignore them, though, I work around them a lot and they eventually come up and get brave enough to stick around your ankles and grab buttons on your skirts. They definitely are much more sensitive to body language, meaning you have to avoid eye contact and not square your body to theirs. That's just my experience, would be different for human-imprinted ducklings but I haven't tried that yet.
 
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My experience with geese has been mainly bad. I don't know what the others do to keep them sweet, but if you can manage that they might be nice pets. I see them as messy attack ducks that are 3x the size with 10x the mean bits. It's been the case with geese raised by multiple people. Some of them were super sweet until they hit puberty, some were just mean. This goes for both sexes all times of the year. Both people eventually sold out of them because they were just too much. They weren't new poultry people either and I did not see anything wrong with the manner of handling or any weakness in body language that would incite aggression. With adults it was more of a nuisance, but I have seen them knock down children and go after their heads. No, no nests were involved.

Ducks, on the other hand, are awesome. I have yet to encounter a mean one, well, except the broody half-mallard on my neighbour's pond. I own 9 of them right now and they just make me smile to watch them. Winter water is a bit of a pain, but hey, they're waterfowl & I'm willing to go to a bit of work to be able to keep them. I have ducks from all classes except heavy, I think... or maybe I do have one heavy. I'm forgetting. They're all super sweet.
View attachment 1187946
Two of my lovely girls, Brooke and Hailey.
Are they saxony and welsh harlequin? Welsh harlequin are definitely on the top of my duck breed list. You’re girls are beautiful
 
My experience with geese has been mainly bad. I don't know what the others do to keep them sweet, but if you can manage that they might be nice pets. I see them as messy attack ducks that are 3x the size with 10x the mean bits. It's been the case with geese raised by multiple people. Some of them were super sweet until they hit puberty, some were just mean. This goes for both sexes all times of the year. Both people eventually sold out of them because they were just too much. They weren't new poultry people either and I did not see anything wrong with the manner of handling or any weakness in body language that would incite aggression. With adults it was more of a nuisance, but I have seen them knock down children and go after their heads. No, no nests were involved.

What breeds, though? Breed is important to the temperament of geese.

I breed tufted romans. Have never had a mean one. Even the ganders. I kept a gander this year because he got attached to my Call ducks and he was the son of my favorite goose, and he's one of the sweetest geese I own. Lets me pet his chest while he nibbles on my hair, just like his mother.

And if a gander or goose gets shirty with you (like I said, mine never have, but it happens) if you establish your dominance over them, they stop.

This is Zilla, the boy I kept even though I wasn't going to because his temperament is so good.

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Here he is as a juvenile protecting 'his' Calls:

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And as a newly hatched baby:

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I'm not saying everyone should jump right into geese, but they definitely aren't all terror attack birds, especially if you raise them right and don't pick a breed that's known to be high strung and aggressive. I can get into a goose nest while a goose is on it and they let me do it. So how they are raised and breed are both very important.
 

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