- Thread starter
- #11
Hi_Im_Cody
In the Brooder
- May 13, 2018
- 3
- 10
- 31
Thank you all for the warm welcomes and pointing me towards useful sections of the forum!
I've come up with my first questions I couldn't find an exact answer on.
Exactly HOW wet can our ducklings get, before they need help drying off? Our girls are absolutely SOAKING their front-sides, but the rest of their bodies are staying dry. So far I've been drying them off every opportunity I get, but it's MANY times a day. I decided to let them go without drying and see how they acted, and they just went under the heat lamp and started preening and seemingly drying themselves off. So I wasn't sure if my constant drying was necessary or not.
My next question was about biting. At first it was only Bella that would nibble on us. Then Bella began to really aggressively (as aggressive as a little duck can be, I guess) bite our fingers. She'd latch on to any piece of flesh she could get and start shaking her head. It doesn't hurt, of course, but now Daisy is doing it too! Up to this point, Daisy hadn't done that at all and had been really sweet when held.
Is there anything special we're supposed to be doing to "reprimand" their biting? I currently just tell them "No biting", and continue holding them so they don't think that biting will get them their way. But Bella pretty much won't stop until I put her down.
I've come up with my first questions I couldn't find an exact answer on.
Exactly HOW wet can our ducklings get, before they need help drying off? Our girls are absolutely SOAKING their front-sides, but the rest of their bodies are staying dry. So far I've been drying them off every opportunity I get, but it's MANY times a day. I decided to let them go without drying and see how they acted, and they just went under the heat lamp and started preening and seemingly drying themselves off. So I wasn't sure if my constant drying was necessary or not.
My next question was about biting. At first it was only Bella that would nibble on us. Then Bella began to really aggressively (as aggressive as a little duck can be, I guess) bite our fingers. She'd latch on to any piece of flesh she could get and start shaking her head. It doesn't hurt, of course, but now Daisy is doing it too! Up to this point, Daisy hadn't done that at all and had been really sweet when held.
Is there anything special we're supposed to be doing to "reprimand" their biting? I currently just tell them "No biting", and continue holding them so they don't think that biting will get them their way. But Bella pretty much won't stop until I put her down.