Fox got my duck

So sorry for your loss. I agree. Now that the fox has scored it will lurk looking for another opportunity when you least expect it, especially since it has kits to feed They are sneaky. Good luck...
Thank you. That’s exactly what’s weighing on my mind. I see both the adults hanging around on the waterfront. As I write this I’m thinking I might try feeding them as a solution. If I throw a hook in the water I catch a catfish right away. Maybe they would be happy with that. It’s not like feeding them is what’s going to encourage them to stay - they seem pretty settled in. Thoughts anyone?
 
I’m so upset.😢 A fox got one of my ducks. We live on the Potomac and he ALMOST made it into the river. There’s a den of a mated pair and 3 Kits in the neighbor’s yard. I have been diligent when my ducks are out and about but clearly not diligent enough. I take these creatures lives into my hands and let them down. I want them to live like ducks, not caged up. I have to come up with a strategy. I’ll try to sleep on it. Advice welcome.
Now that he's come once, he'll come back till they are all gone. Basically, your ducks are "The Old Country Buffet" for him. Go to Premier 1 Fencing. They have electric netting that will at least keep them safe from everything but Hawks/Owls. I would strongly advise to get higher than the 42" ft poultry netting. We got the deer netting with 3 inch space between them that is 68" tall. See: https://www.premier1supplies.com/deer/fencing.php?fence_id=115 You can get solar or electric charger. It MUST BE ELECTRIFIED to work! We got enough to fence the garden for when we want the ducks there and it's a HUGE area, 165' X 55'. They are totally happy. But even then with the Hawks, we sit out there. We're waiting on a Pyrenean Mastiff, giant sized guard dog. The other thing we use when we aren't going to sit with them is a movable Chicken run from Stromberg's. See: https://www.strombergschickens.com/product/walk-in-chicken-run-13-1-ft-x-9-8-ft-x-6-6-ft It's really not safe for Foxes, but we have a dozen dogs that keep foxes away in daylight hours. Ducks are happy little dudes, and they don't sit around and think that they have no life because they aren't loose. Ours are so happy with being moved daily.
 
My brother has a fox with 8 kits in a den in one of his pastures. He has chickens but apparently the fox hasn't shown any interest in the birds. He does put feed out for them but I don't recall what he uses. So far so good, but I still don't trust them. He does have electric wires around his coop and run. Good luck...
 
Now that he's come once, he'll come back till they are all gone. Basically, your ducks are "The Old Country Buffet" for him. Go to Premier 1 Fencing. They have electric netting that will at least keep them safe from everything but Hawks/Owls. I would strongly advise to get higher than the 42" ft poultry netting. We got the deer netting with 3 inch space between them that is 68" tall. See: https://www.premier1supplies.com/deer/fencing.php?fence_id=115 You can get solar or electric charger. It MUST BE ELECTRIFIED to work! We got enough to fence the garden for when we want the ducks there and it's a HUGE area, 165' X 55'. They are totally happy. But even then with the Hawks, we sit out there. We're waiting on a Pyrenean Mastiff, giant sized guard dog. The other thing we use when we aren't going to sit with them is a movable Chicken run from Stromberg's. See: https://www.strombergschickens.com/product/walk-in-chicken-run-13-1-ft-x-9-8-ft-x-6-6-ft It's really not safe for Foxes, but we have a dozen dogs that keep foxes away in daylight hours. Ducks are happy little dudes, and they don't sit around and think that they have no life because they aren't loose. Ours are so happy with being moved daily.
This is GREAT info - thank you muc , especially for the "happy dudes" part! So here's a dumb question: How well do the ducks tolerate getting zapped, because surely they do. Incidently, just this morning I was eying one of their hang outs and resolved to fence it in. I started racking up the expenses in my head - for the pet ducks that "I got for my grandkids." Seems like the netting is the perfect economical solution. Another question: Obviously I can't bury electric fence, so do I need to add any kind of digging barrier or is the zapper enough? This is just a daytime place for them - they have a large pen that's locked inside the boathouse for overnight.
 
That’s quite the challenge you have and koodos on the success of your watchfulness. Living on the river and having free ranging ducks seemed like such a natural combination. Perhaps my biggest mistake was the choice of non-flying Pekins. But then I thought the duck hunters would obviously recognize them as not wild and not shoot them.
Using welded fencing make an enclosure around the area and put an electric fence around the fence. Because foxes jump and climb trees they can climb over a fence without touching the wires if you don't have a top on it.Once they've killed one they'll be back for the rest. Until you come up with a better plan they are high risk of being attacked again. Foxes have small stomachs, eat often and sometimes kill every bird and carry them off one by one if not caught. My condolences for your loss but Ducks are hard to protect out in the open.They need to be kept in a pen.
 
I’m sure that’s the case here with this fox. The adult pair has been stalking them so I have kept a watchful eye. Not watchful enough.

thank you.
Sorry but any duck would be a "sitting duck" the minute it swam ashore or landed near beside a den of sly foxes with hungry kits. They stalk their prey quietly and are quick on their feet. Lessons learned the hard way aren't forgotten.
 
My brother has a fox with 8 kits in a den in one of his pastures. He has chickens but apparently the fox hasn't shown any interest in the birds. He does put feed out for them but I don't recall what he uses. So far so good, but I still don't trust them. He does have electric wires around his coop and run. Good luck...
I hope he keeps them fed well so they won't be tempted.
 
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I see this fox most every night on at least one of my cameras.
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I’m sure that’s the case here with this fox. The adult pair has been stalking them so I have kept a watchful eye. Not watchful enough.
Please don't blame yourself. Your predator situation has changed. Unless you intend to stay outside 24 hours a day watching the ducks, you cannot possibly control what happens to them. I love when domestic ducks show up on the river, which is now rare since fortunately Easter ducklings are no longer considered good gifts. Their presence adds diversity to the wild duck population, and the idea possibly mating with mallards would badly affect the mallard population is totally ludicrous. Believe me, the last standing duck on the face of the earth will be a purebred mallard.

There is only one pekin now on the river where I am at, and he can as readily and quickly fly as a mallard! I've never seen anything like it. He's not as big as some pekins, but he is much larger than a mallard, so his mother could not have possibly been a mallard. Until now, I've only seen pekins make flying leaps downward, and quickly move across water by flapping their wings. This drake easily flies upward and across the river with the mallards.

The only domestic duck breed I've seen that can successfully reproduce in the wild; readily fly, including distances; and obviously outsmart many predators is the Muscovy duck. But no one should get Muscovy ducks in a residential area! They can rapidly multiply, because those little females have some uncanny ability to make nests where predators can't get their eggs; and they can perch on decks, piers, railings, rooftops, etc. Many people hate them with an absolute passion, including because many think the drakes are so ugly.
 
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