How much feed should I need per duckling?

Boshaft

In the Brooder
7 Years
Dec 27, 2012
15
0
24
I ordered 7 day old ducklings and a 25 lb bag of food, thinking I could figure out how much they ate and then order more as needed, but it's been a week since I ordered the food and it hasn't gotten to me yet (What are these people thinking, taking holidays? Sheesh! I kid, I kid)

At the very bottom of http://www.dpi.nsw.gov.au/agriculture/livestock/poultry/feeding/nutritional-requirements-ducks , there is a chart:

Age (weeks) Feed for week (kg) Cumulative feed (kg)
0-1 0.15 0.15
1 0.40 0.55
2 0.75 1.30
3 0.95 2.25
4 1.00 3.25
5 1.30 4.55
6 1.65 6.20
7 1.80 8.00
8 1.60 9.60

In imperial:

Age (weeks) Feed for week (lbs) Cumulative feed (lbs)
0-1 0.33 0.33
1 0.88 1.21
2 1.65 2.87
3 2.09 4.96
4 2.20 7.17
5 2.87 10.03
6 3.64 13.67
7 3.97 17.6
8 3.53 21.16

How closely do these numbers fit your own experience? They seem really high to me, especially if the feed conversion rate is 2.5-3:1. Are my ducks going to weigh 7 pounds at 8 weeks? I know it varies by the breed - I'm getting 3 Khaki Campbells, 1 Cayuga, 1 Buff, and 2 Grimaud Hybrid Pekins.

If the chart is accurate I should have enough to last until they are 3 weeks, at which point I can go ahead and start them on an adult food like http://www.mazuri.com/mazuriwaterfowlbreeder.aspx right? I just don't want to run out and have them eating cat food while I wait on UPS
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I had fifteen runner ducklings for the first two weeks, then four went to live with their owner, and the eleven stayed with me. I bought a turkey-waterfowl starter, 50 pound bag the day they arrived.

At between two and three weeks, I started adding grower, in increasing proportion, to the starter crumbles (another 50 pound bag). Probably after five or six weeks I was done with the first bag of feed.

That is not a precise set of numbers for you, but that is what I did.

Ducklings don't eat every morsel. They splash quite a bit, if the feed gets damp it must be taken out to avoid mold. And they grow amazingly quickly. Really. I think the first night their legs got half an inch longer. So, yes, I think those numbers look pretty reasonable.

I just put food out, and kept it before the ducklings 24/7 for the first two months. When I was down to a third of a bag, I got another bag. Nowadays I get two or three bags at a time and keep them cool and dry.
 
Like Amiga, I don't keep track.

If you are ordering your feed and having it shipped, you are going to spend a ton of money. My 13 ducklings are 1 month old and have gone through about 50 lbs of feed but their mom is with them and eats with them.

I would look for a local feed store. You don't want to have to switch their feed if you run out, discover the feed shipped is bad or something.
 
Believe me, I'd love to buy from a local feed store and save the shopping cost, but the closest one is a couple hundred miles away. Fortunately, they should be able to forage a large chunk of their diets. I'll probably order the adult food when they get here so I can switch them over.

Do y'all keep the feed in the paper bag it's shipped in or dump it into a sealed container? I'm thinking that would reduce the chance of spoiling, as well as keep pests out.
 
Either a sealed 3.5 gallon plastic bucket (with resealable lid), or a large metal trash bin with tight lid, double lined with garbage bags.
X 2 I do this with all my feeds from dog to wild birds to pigeons to poultry.
 
Hmm is 3.5 gallons big enough to hold lbs of feed? Or do you divide each bag up?
 
I divide a 50 pound bag of Mazuri (very fluffy pellets) into four of those buckets. A 50 pound bag of Blue Seal Organic Layer pellets fits into three buckets. A 30 gallon metal can holds either one Mazuri bag or one and a half Blue Seal.
 
Well, I got my food yesterday, and the ducklings today :D Unfortunately, one of them spent too long on the heating pad during shipping, so she has 3 blisters on the bottom of her foot. All the are on the webbing, and she can walk, albeit poorly. Is there anything I can do for her to help?

Boshaft
 
Well, I got my food yesterday, and the ducklings today
big_smile.png
Unfortunately, one of them spent too long on the heating pad during shipping, so she has 3 blisters on the bottom of her foot. All the are on the webbing, and she can walk, albeit poorly. Is there anything I can do for her to help?

Boshaft
Triple antibiotic and soft bedding till the foot heals. something like Poultry Nutri drench in water to help give her a boost won't hurt the other ducklings either. And pics when you get time... Congrats on the new ducklings.
 

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