Okay, I am actually serious about this.
I thought of using "training ducks" as the title, but imagined I would get "advice" about circus acts.
Some chuckles are good, but I am looking for some serious advice.
My setup is going to involve getting runner ducks from their night pen to their day pen, which will be moved about a bit (temporary fence I can roll up and set up elsewhere). I have read that they have been herded from village pens out to rice paddies, following staffs with ropes or ribbons tied to the upper ends, so they are trainable that way.
I am expecting to get ten day-olds in a couple of months, so I should be able to train them to some extent, to follow me to their daytime enclosure and then later back to their more secure night pen and shelter.
Any clues on how that is done? Do they just bond with their humans and follow them instinctively? Does this mean I need to introduce them to their ducksitters early on so they will respond well? Has anyone tried using an object they would recognize to get them to follow? I am sure treats are involved!
The farthest distance I expect to have to herd them is just around the house (50 feet long, so a distance of up to 75 feet) and down a twenty foot path. It isn't terribly far, but it is not a straight line, and I don't want to have to chase runners all over the neighborhood, which is full of large dogs. Yikes!
A tractor does not make sense for this location - it is a hillside, with some of the paths as narrow as three feet. There are level areas, but most of those are raised garden beds or the ducks' night pen and tiny pond.
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
I thought of using "training ducks" as the title, but imagined I would get "advice" about circus acts.

My setup is going to involve getting runner ducks from their night pen to their day pen, which will be moved about a bit (temporary fence I can roll up and set up elsewhere). I have read that they have been herded from village pens out to rice paddies, following staffs with ropes or ribbons tied to the upper ends, so they are trainable that way.
I am expecting to get ten day-olds in a couple of months, so I should be able to train them to some extent, to follow me to their daytime enclosure and then later back to their more secure night pen and shelter.
Any clues on how that is done? Do they just bond with their humans and follow them instinctively? Does this mean I need to introduce them to their ducksitters early on so they will respond well? Has anyone tried using an object they would recognize to get them to follow? I am sure treats are involved!

The farthest distance I expect to have to herd them is just around the house (50 feet long, so a distance of up to 75 feet) and down a twenty foot path. It isn't terribly far, but it is not a straight line, and I don't want to have to chase runners all over the neighborhood, which is full of large dogs. Yikes!
A tractor does not make sense for this location - it is a hillside, with some of the paths as narrow as three feet. There are level areas, but most of those are raised garden beds or the ducks' night pen and tiny pond.
Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!