- May 24, 2011
- 191
- 12
- 93
Alright, I have two questions. One, my female goose is really gaga about me. I mean she loved to be held, petted, sung to, talked to, and if we're outside grazing she enjoys cuddling up to my leg and nibbling on the grass around us. Problem is, the older she gets, the more upset she becomes when I leave a room. She just screams and screams like she's absolutely terrified. I don't go to her when she does this, I'm not sure if that helps just the horse trainer in me saying that would feed the behavior, but it takes her a good ten to twenty minutes before she tires out and if she hears my voice at all during that time she increases her efforts ten fold.
I'm really glad they like me, I want them to be social with me, but eventually they're going to be over 20 lbs. and they will have to go outside and stay in the barn and spend their days grazing. I thought the older they got, the more independant they would become. This is true for my gander, but not for my girl. My question is (and it pains me to ask this) do I need to stop handling them? I won't lie, they're very spoiled. Mother leaves music on for them in the brooder room from the time she goes to work to when I get up an hour or so later. Then I clean their pen, talk to them, get them some more grass and leave them be for a few hours. Over all between the twice daily full cleans, the spot cleaning, grazing time, and bath time, they get handled very very frequently. I've tried to cut back, but maybe I need to be hands off all together? I will admit they've been my prime source of entertainment since my foot surgery but if it will make their transition outside easier (I don't want them to hurt themselves or the ducks) then I'll do what ever it takes aside from being mean to them.
Also, my male gosling has a weird thing happening to his wing. Happening is the wrong word, he's been like this since I got him. His wing just sort of, hangs a little, more so than the girl's. I didn't think they could get angel wing that young, but the older they get the more I worry. What does it look like to you guys?
http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/38/0727150111.jpg/ for some reason the BYC image thing isn't working on my computer today.
I'm really glad they like me, I want them to be social with me, but eventually they're going to be over 20 lbs. and they will have to go outside and stay in the barn and spend their days grazing. I thought the older they got, the more independant they would become. This is true for my gander, but not for my girl. My question is (and it pains me to ask this) do I need to stop handling them? I won't lie, they're very spoiled. Mother leaves music on for them in the brooder room from the time she goes to work to when I get up an hour or so later. Then I clean their pen, talk to them, get them some more grass and leave them be for a few hours. Over all between the twice daily full cleans, the spot cleaning, grazing time, and bath time, they get handled very very frequently. I've tried to cut back, but maybe I need to be hands off all together? I will admit they've been my prime source of entertainment since my foot surgery but if it will make their transition outside easier (I don't want them to hurt themselves or the ducks) then I'll do what ever it takes aside from being mean to them.
Also, my male gosling has a weird thing happening to his wing. Happening is the wrong word, he's been like this since I got him. His wing just sort of, hangs a little, more so than the girl's. I didn't think they could get angel wing that young, but the older they get the more I worry. What does it look like to you guys?
http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/38/0727150111.jpg/ for some reason the BYC image thing isn't working on my computer today.