Duckling Brooder with an In-ground Pool

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I wrote this for the brooder competition but thought I would cross-post it here. I have been hatching ducklings at least once a year for about 8 years now. I have always started my ducklings with water slowly. When they are a day old, I fill a pie pan with water, add some floating food and let them walk in the water for about 5 minutes. The next day, they get a 9 x 13 cake pan and I might let them visit it two times. Within a few days, my ducklings are swimming much more frequently. Water stimulates their oil glands. During the first week they are always supervised and never allowed to get to soaking wet. The room is warm and they have a heat lamp so they do not get a chill. They did not get to use the pool in the brooder until their second week of life. Anyway, here is the post:

I needed a brooder for Dutch Hookbill ducklings for my classroom, so, I built one with an in-ground pool. Everyone complains about ducklings making the brooder wet but I think if you give them water to swim in and the correct waterers it really helps. So, the one end was built to have a bus-boy tub sunken in it as a pool (I use a brick or rock as a step to get out).
9BBAE000-212F-464D-A3ED-319D20EC19F0.jpeg


The middle is half inch hardware cloth so spilled food, water, and waste goes through to trays lined with puppy pads. When the ducklings were small I covered the hardware cloth with puppy pads so it didn’t bother their feet.

The farthest end from the pool is sunken about an inch with a solid floor so it can hold shavings for sleeping in.
FED2C4A9-07C9-41AF-91F9-ED8F5152B145.jpeg


I cut a piece of corrugated plastic to cover the pool when the ducklings couldn’t be supervised or needed to rest (always start ducklings out slowly and increase swim time and frequency as they get older).
I also hatch chicks in my classroom and it worked great for them too with the pool covered.
8801048A-7870-4889-975F-F899153ED588.jpeg


I used scrap wood and plexiglass so my cost was around $100.
3523DE0A-6275-4D62-A96E-B72BC2E6E9BF_1_105_c.jpeg


Here is a video of my old brooder which inspired the new one. That one had a side I made of screening which came down and made the pool ramp.
 
Hi!

I needed a brooder for Dutch Hookbill ducklings for my classroom, so, I built one with an in-ground pool. Everyone complains about ducklings making the brooder wet but I think if you give them water to swim in and the correct waterers it really helps. So, the one end was built to have a bus-boy tub sunken in it as a pool (I use a brick or rock as a step to get out).
9BBAE000-212F-464D-A3ED-319D20EC19F0.jpeg


The middle is half inch hardware cloth so spilled food, water, and waste goes through to trays lined with puppy pads. When the ducklings were small I covered the hardware cloth with puppy pads so it didn’t bother their feet.

The farthest end from the pool is sunken about an inch with a solid floor so it can hold shavings for sleeping in.
FED2C4A9-07C9-41AF-91F9-ED8F5152B145.jpeg


I cut a piece of corrugated plastic to cover the pool when the ducklings couldn’t be supervised or needed to rest (always start ducklings out slowly and increase swim time and frequency as they get older).
I also hatch chicks in my classroom and it worked great for them too with the pool covered.
8801048A-7870-4889-975F-F899153ED588.jpeg


I used scrap wood and plexiglass so my cost was around $100.
3523DE0A-6275-4D62-A96E-B72BC2E6E9BF_1_105_c.jpeg

No, but... what?
(It is so cute...!!)

I have never raised ducklings in brooders, but if I did, I would totally want to copy your idea here.

Not only your brooder looks perfectly clean and secure - is it 100% safe, with the use of a heat lamp? -, but the fact you used plexiglass sheets as side panels...?
...oh my God, this just makes it a greater work yet...!!

(Congratulations for your work!)

I wrote this for the brooder competition but thought I would cross-post it here.

Yeah... your thread is really interesting, AND it is so going to help people...!!
Especially given the fact that you have taken the time to explain - clearly - how you did your brooder and raised the ducklings, and that you even have posted pictures...

...Thank you for sharing it with us!!

(You deserve a medal.)
 
Awe, thank you! I was just trying to solve the problem of keeping my ducklings in the best conditions possible since they stay at school from @3:30pm to 7:45am alone. I also need my classroom not to smell too bad. Being a teacher also means I can’t help but explain everything! 🙄

I think the heat lamp is safe enough. It clamps really well to the wood frame and they have lots of room to find a cooler spot if they are hot. Once my ducklings are a few days old I only turn the heat lamp on during the day. My school tends to keep the air conditioning on pretty cold during the day and I want them to be able to warm up after swimming.
 

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