I have a small pen set up inside the goose yard and I walk them over to that corner very calm and slow and they all just file in the pen, and when they're in there they kinda just give up and let me pick them up if I need to.
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Sounds like progress and they are so funny with new things. Keep us updated I think your on a rollOk, I didn't get a picture of their setup today due to foul (hahaha) weather, BUT the evening "routine" went MUCH MUCH smoother this evening. My wife helped me to corral them into one corner near the opening of their house as calmly as possible. I picked up the first goose, and it reluctantly took the few steps up the ramp and inside. Everyone else ran off.
Then I corralled them back into the corner and did the same with the second goose, really really calmly. By the time the second goose was in, some jumped in on their own to be together. The remaining 4 ran off again, but we're even easier to coax back. My wife and I stepped away a few steps from the door, and they all reluctantly jumped in!
I had stopped to get a couple ears of sweet corn on my way home, but they wouldn't take it from me. So once they were all inside, I put it in their grain bucket. They were predictably scared of it. They would run back, then approach the bucket. When they saw the corn in there, they'd run again. Hopefully they'll discover it before I let them out in the morning!
One of my books, "Barnyard in your Backyard", is spot on regarding night time sheltering:There is a lot of misinformation about geese out there. Really, all the books out there have been insufficient. I mostly raise them like hyper-sensitive, hyper-intelligient ducks- if that makes any sense!
That is funny and very true.One of my books, "Barnyard in your Backyard", is spot on regarding night time sheltering:
"Because they don't like to be indoors, you'll need to train your bevy or gaggle from the start to go inside at night. Have a plan for getting them from their favorite resting place to the shelter door, perhaps by enlisting help or arranging doors and gates to funnel them in the desired direction. If the first time out they lead you around the barn and through the garden, be prepared to take that same circuitous route every evening from then on."
I laughed out loud when reading that - so typical for geese!