Eeyore I hope your gozzies is doing good this morning.
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It probably has something srong with it anyway, hence the head thing....Geese are tougher than we are, eh? We try to save them, and they die slowly. Geese push them out, and they´re gone overnight....
Just pop a little mirror in there with it so it feels it has company, and keep it warm....![]()
Eeyore I hope your gozzies is doing good this morning.
probably a survival thing. I would imagine the reason WHY geese are so willing and eager to accept other babies is because this helps ensure orphaned babies won't die abandoned.Yeah I think I knew that on some level but I live in foolish hope sometimes. It didn't make it through the night. I probably just prolonged any pain it might have been in but you're right, geese are definitely tougher than me!
The healthy ones are! So fat and happy. I had to laugh last night: It was pretty cool but goose moms are pretty warm. I went out to check on them with a flashlight before bed and found the mom and the little fuzzy butts hanging out but it was almost like one of those movie pans where one of these things was not like the other. In addition to all of her new brood, that crafty little gosling that hatched a week or so ago was taking advantage and was tucked up in there with everyone else! I have no idea why he didn't go to his mom, but maybe he just wants friends close to his own age.
It was pretty funny, though. Little butt, little butt, huge butt, little butt.
probably a survival thing. I would imagine the reason WHY geese are so willing and eager to accept other babies is because this helps ensure orphaned babies won't die abandoned.
This probably happens in nature as a way to evade predators. There is safety in numbers and this may allow the original parents to brood another clutch before the season is over? Or is it too hot now?
I'm sorry the little one didn't make it. Happy to hear the rest are doing so well. I would love to have seen a pic of that little butt, little butt, huge butt, little butt. What a sweet pic.Yeah I think I knew that on some level but I live in foolish hope sometimes. It didn't make it through the night. I probably just prolonged any pain it might have been in but you're right, geese are definitely tougher than me!
The healthy ones are! So fat and happy. I had to laugh last night: It was pretty cool but goose moms are pretty warm. I went out to check on them with a flashlight before bed and found the mom and the little fuzzy butts hanging out but it was almost like one of those movie pans where one of these things was not like the other. In addition to all of her new brood, that crafty little gosling that hatched a week or so ago was taking advantage and was tucked up in there with everyone else! I have no idea why he didn't go to his mom, but maybe he just wants friends close to his own age.
It was pretty funny, though. Little butt, little butt, huge butt, little butt.
I'm sorry the little one didn't make it. Happy to hear the rest are doing so well. I would love to have seen a pic of that little butt, little butt, huge butt, little butt. What a sweet pic.
Most of us try to beat nature!Yeah I think I knew that on some level but I live in foolish hope sometimes. It didn't make it through the night. I probably just prolonged any pain it might have been in but you're right, geese are definitely tougher than me!
The healthy ones are! So fat and happy. I had to laugh last night: It was pretty cool but goose moms are pretty warm. I went out to check on them with a flashlight before bed and found the mom and the little fuzzy butts hanging out but it was almost like one of those movie pans where one of these things was not like the other. In addition to all of her new brood, that crafty little gosling that hatched a week or so ago was taking advantage and was tucked up in there with everyone else! I have no idea why he didn't go to his mom, but maybe he just wants friends close to his own age.
It was pretty funny, though. Little butt, little butt, huge butt, little butt.
Most of us try to beat nature!But sorry to hear you lost it anyway. I doubt it was in pain, it just wasn´t right.
Funny about the other gosling. Out of interest, how many ganders and geese are involved here? If you have more geese than ganders, then which goose is the gander´s favourite? I´ve found that my gander will take any goslings to his favourite goose, whether she´s sitting on eggs, or with youngsters. They´ll all end up one family anyway. (This one reason why I´m planning to have just pairs from this year.)
Has he adopted them as his new family now then? And how many males and females do you have there?Thanks. I'm a little sad for the one but ecstatic for the ones I have!
As for the flock composition - I have 4 geese and 3 ganders. However, one of the geese and one of the ganders are yearlings. The yearling gander is the father (best I can tell) of the early, lonely gosling. The yearling goose just seems... confused. She didn't nest this year. I'd find goose eggs in the weirdest places (middle of the driveway, in a turkey nest, etc) that I'm sure were hers. She just never could reconcile what was happening with her fundament and hung out with the ganders while everyone else was brooding. So I get what you're saying but, while I do have more geese than ganders, that's probably not it.
I am considering keeping/getting another gander so everyone's paired up. I know it's just going to make for more fighting come spring but there's going to be spring fighting as long as there's more than one gander anyway. And maybe everyone will be happier in the long run if they can kind of work it out and pair off?
Big gozzer, little gozzers
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Has he adopted them as his new family now then? And how many males and females do you have there?
The families seem to be happier with a mom and dad goose, that´s where I see the benefits of having pairs.
Oh, and in my opinion, first-year geese aren´t worth breeding anyway. So you basically have 3 pairs then. did they stay in their relative pairs once they´d sorted themselves out?