- Apr 13, 2011
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No, you CAN'T! First of all, it is illegal. Second of all, the domestic mallard is not as "savy" in the wild as a truely wild mallard. You would just be feeding the local predators.
Not to stir up the pot again, but here is an expert opinion under this paragraph. Personal experience. My mallards flew away and they are pretty wild now. If I am lucky, I see them for about 2 minutes as they eat the food that I leave outside every morning before I leave home. They fly in and fly out. I don't see how REALISTICALLY a game warden could fine you unless they film you releasing all your birds. The only predator my ducks ever suffered was nasty children. Mallards are stronger than other birds. Mine learned how to looked for earthworm on its own and never came back after they found a pond. Eventually, they even stopped coming home at night. Hardly domestic to me. In fact, I feel a bit betrayed that the only time they come (if I see them) is to eat the food for about a minute. Its a half-hearted effort because they are half full anyways. I see them eating the algae and plants in the water.
Here is an export opinion on releasing mallard:
http://en.allexperts.com/q/Wildlife-2507/Raising-6-wild-Mallard.htm
Although its discouraged, it is better than eating them and giving them to overworked rescuers. I doubt they keep the ducks in good condition if their advertisements is any clue. If you go Sunday morning early in bodies, I don't think it will be a problem. You can always say you found hungry ducks on your property or releasing it back into the lake? They can never prove its your ducks unless they subpoena for your bank. That takes a lot of money time and a court order. Chances are very good that no one will hold you for that. Don't do anything that doesn't make sense (keeping them forever when you can't or eating them) because someone was screaming fire in a movie theater.
No, you CAN'T! First of all, it is illegal. Second of all, the domestic mallard is not as "savy" in the wild as a truely wild mallard. You would just be feeding the local predators.
Not to stir up the pot again, but here is an expert opinion under this paragraph. Personal experience. My mallards flew away and they are pretty wild now. If I am lucky, I see them for about 2 minutes as they eat the food that I leave outside every morning before I leave home. They fly in and fly out. I don't see how REALISTICALLY a game warden could fine you unless they film you releasing all your birds. The only predator my ducks ever suffered was nasty children. Mallards are stronger than other birds. Mine learned how to looked for earthworm on its own and never came back after they found a pond. Eventually, they even stopped coming home at night. Hardly domestic to me. In fact, I feel a bit betrayed that the only time they come (if I see them) is to eat the food for about a minute. Its a half-hearted effort because they are half full anyways. I see them eating the algae and plants in the water.
Here is an export opinion on releasing mallard:
http://en.allexperts.com/q/Wildlife-2507/Raising-6-wild-Mallard.htm
Although its discouraged, it is better than eating them and giving them to overworked rescuers. I doubt they keep the ducks in good condition if their advertisements is any clue. If you go Sunday morning early in bodies, I don't think it will be a problem. You can always say you found hungry ducks on your property or releasing it back into the lake? They can never prove its your ducks unless they subpoena for your bank. That takes a lot of money time and a court order. Chances are very good that no one will hold you for that. Don't do anything that doesn't make sense (keeping them forever when you can't or eating them) because someone was screaming fire in a movie theater.
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