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- #31
Last year I had one male with two geese, and one male with 3 geese.
The two geese produced, and two of the three geese produced, but both the ganders stuck with their favourite Mrs while the other had to cope with goslings being stolen by the gander and taken to the favourite goose, and with the other gander, the two extra females just kept together and raised the goslings of the one female (other produced nothing) independently of the male who just wanted his favourite Mrs (oh, he wanted all the babies, of course, so I fenced them off so he couldn´t steal them). This year I´ve decided to keep them all in pairs except for two geese with one gander, as I´m doing an experiment on colour with those ones. They´ll be fine if they don´t share a nest, being sisters, so I´ll just keep an eye on them.
So, short version is: One gander will probably do, but you´re more likely to get success with more.And that´ll be in the second year, too, when they´re more sensible and breedable in general.![]()
Can you remove the gander after all the babies are born and let the ladies do the baby rearing as a community?