I need help of hatching ducklings

Goose_Goose

Songster
5 Years
Nov 20, 2018
88
72
141
Gallup, New Mexico
I have a couple of ducks that are ready to lay eggs. I want them to lay on their eggs and hatch them naturally. My ducks lay their eggs everywhere and I want to know if I can gather them up and put them in a nesting box for her? Will she lay on them? I also want to know that if she does start laying on them, how can I help her with eating and drinking food? Do I keep other ducks away from her and feed her separately? Please help!
 
I let a chicken hen hatch out my duck eggs, they make better mothers, and don't try and sit on eggs wet, course you have to have a broody.
 
Hello. I always let my Call Hens hatch out Ducklings.
First your Hens have to mature and decide to build a nest. She will lay eggs until she decides to set them. Not all Hens go Broody though. Provide nesting material and a safe dry nesting site. Dont let the Ducks out of the Run till they lay their eggs. Generally Ducks lay eggs in the morning.
 
You need to let one of your ducks go broody first. And the out the eggs where she has decided she wants to have babies....
If they are like mine, they can often decide that they want to have babies in the stupidest of places... i have one nesting in my ourdoor fireplace! -thank god I didnt light the fire!

The other thing you can try, that I did with one of my girls when I noticed she was going broody, was I then shut her into my largest house with run and nest box, along with a pool, her favourite foods, and her favourite drake...
She then of course had no option but to lay in the nest box, and after she had laid engh for her nest, she sat on them there, and than raised the ducklings in the same place.

Can I ask what breed your ducks are? Some are better mums than others? For example I have silver appleyards who are constantly going broody, but are rubbish mums, they either get off the nest right before the ducklings are due to hatch, or abandon them five minutes after they hatch, while my khaki campbells, who indont think are reputed to be great mums, have been far more reliable, but not perfect.
Anyway, with domestics, if its their first time, try and get them locked in a house with a run, (obviously put a favouried drake in so the eggs are fertile!) to nest, otherwise you may find yourself with eggs close to hatch day, and suddenly mum (who looked you in the eye and swore she wanted babies more than anything else in the entire world, even green peas) gets off the nest and leaves them to die....
Either that or make sure you have multiple backup ducks, or broody chickens, or an incubator.

While some of my domestic ducks are awesome mums, ive lost count of how many ducklings this year have ended up being hatched in my bator, or raised by me, thanks to mums losing interest etc... There is one beside me right now...being looked after by an older duck who is also one I had to hatch when her mum got off the nest a few days before she was due to hatch....

Once you have a duck who is broody, and showing nesting behaviour, you can basically put whatever eggs you want under her, i have several who indont wish to breed, who I have put eggs from ducks I do want to breed under, they are happy to sit on whatever... If you put a turtle eggs under them theyd happily hatch it lol.

Actually I have some ducks who sat on eggs for the 28 days and nothing hatched (most were not fertile unfortunately) and after the failed nest, they actually moved the failed eggs out, then took eggs laid by other ducks nearby, and moved them into their nest, and are now sitting on those... So not only will ducks sit on other ducks eggs, they will knowingly sit on other ducks eggs or anything that might hatch, when they are broody.

Most of mine seem to go broody from mid-late spring. Though the ones that sit later seem to be more likely to abandon the nest.
 
You need to let one of your ducks go broody first. And the out the eggs where she has decided she wants to have babies....
If they are like mine, they can often decide that they want to have babies in the stupidest of places... i have one nesting in my ourdoor fireplace! -thank god I didnt light the fire!

The other thing you can try, that I did with one of my girls when I noticed she was going broody, was I then shut her into my largest house with run and nest box, along with a pool, her favourite foods, and her favourite drake...
She then of course had no option but to lay in the nest box, and after she had laid engh for her nest, she sat on them there, and than raised the ducklings in the same place.

Can I ask what breed your ducks are? Some are better mums than others? For example I have silver appleyards who are constantly going broody, but are rubbish mums, they either get off the nest right before the ducklings are due to hatch, or abandon them five minutes after they hatch, while my khaki campbells, who indont think are reputed to be great mums, have been far more reliable, but not perfect.
Anyway, with domestics, if its their first time, try and get them locked in a house with a run, (obviously put a favouried drake in so the eggs are fertile!) to nest, otherwise you may find yourself with eggs close to hatch day, and suddenly mum (who looked you in the eye and swore she wanted babies more than anything else in the entire world, even green peas) gets off the nest and leaves them to die....
Either that or make sure you have multiple backup ducks, or broody chickens, or an incubator.

While some of my domestic ducks are awesome mums, ive lost count of how many ducklings this year have ended up being hatched in my bator, or raised by me, thanks to mums losing interest etc... There is one beside me right now...being looked after by an older duck who is also one I had to hatch when her mum got off the nest a few days before she was due to hatch....

Once you have a duck who is broody, and showing nesting behaviour, you can basically put whatever eggs you want under her, i have several who indont wish to breed, who I have put eggs from ducks I do want to breed under, they are happy to sit on whatever... If you put a turtle eggs under them theyd happily hatch it lol.

Actually I have some ducks who sat on eggs for the 28 days and nothing hatched (most were not fertile unfortunately) and after the failed nest, they actually moved the failed eggs out, then took eggs laid by other ducks nearby, and moved them into their nest, and are now sitting on those... So not only will ducks sit on other ducks eggs, they will knowingly sit on other ducks eggs or anything that might hatch, when they are broody.

Most of mine seem to go broody from mid-late spring. Though the ones that sit later seem to be more likely to abandon the nest.
I have a khaki campbell that has been laying eggs. She tends to lay them everywhere. I have a swedish drake that has interest in her and is very protective of her. I hope she lays on the eggs. Are khaki campbells good mothers
 
You need to let one of your ducks go broody first. And the out the eggs where she has decided she wants to have babies....
If they are like mine, they can often decide that they want to have babies in the stupidest of places... i have one nesting in my ourdoor fireplace! -thank god I didnt light the fire!

The other thing you can try, that I did with one of my girls when I noticed she was going broody, was I then shut her into my largest house with run and nest box, along with a pool, her favourite foods, and her favourite drake...
She then of course had no option but to lay in the nest box, and after she had laid engh for her nest, she sat on them there, and than raised the ducklings in the same place.

Can I ask what breed your ducks are? Some are better mums than others? For example I have silver appleyards who are constantly going broody, but are rubbish mums, they either get off the nest right before the ducklings are due to hatch, or abandon them five minutes after they hatch, while my khaki campbells, who indont think are reputed to be great mums, have been far more reliable, but not perfect.
Anyway, with domestics, if its their first time, try and get them locked in a house with a run, (obviously put a favouried drake in so the eggs are fertile!) to nest, otherwise you may find yourself with eggs close to hatch day, and suddenly mum (who looked you in the eye and swore she wanted babies more than anything else in the entire world, even green peas) gets off the nest and leaves them to die....
Either that or make sure you have multiple backup ducks, or broody chickens, or an incubator.

While some of my domestic ducks are awesome mums, ive lost count of how many ducklings this year have ended up being hatched in my bator, or raised by me, thanks to mums losing interest etc... There is one beside me right now...being looked after by an older duck who is also one I had to hatch when her mum got off the nest a few days before she was due to hatch....

Once you have a duck who is broody, and showing nesting behaviour, you can basically put whatever eggs you want under her, i have several who indont wish to breed, who I have put eggs from ducks I do want to breed under, they are happy to sit on whatever... If you put a turtle eggs under them theyd happily hatch it lol.

Actually I have some ducks who sat on eggs for the 28 days and nothing hatched (most were not fertile unfortunately) and after the failed nest, they actually moved the failed eggs out, then took eggs laid by other ducks nearby, and moved them into their nest, and are now sitting on those... So not only will ducks sit on other ducks eggs, they will knowingly sit on other ducks eggs or anything that might hatch, when they are broody.

Most of mine seem to go broody from mid-late spring. Though the ones that sit later seem to be more likely to abandon the nest.
:goodpost::goodpost::goodpost::goodpost::goodpost:
 
You'll have to wait until she is ready to sit on them, but if she lays all over the place, and you want to encourage her to sit, when you find an egg that would be a decent spot, leave it and see if she lays another with it the next day. Keep leaving them there and see if she starts building a nest. Once she gets "enough" eggs to her liking, she will spend more and more time each day on them, until she stays on them consistently, only leaving for a quick food break, poop break, bath break.
 
You'll have to wait until she is ready to sit on them, but if she lays all over the place, and you want to encourage her to sit, when you find an egg that would be a decent spot, leave it and see if she lays another with it the next day. Keep leaving them there and see if she starts building a nest. Once she gets "enough" eggs to her liking, she will spend more and more time each day on them, until she stays on them consistently, only leaving for a quick food break, poop break, bath break.
Thank you:bow
 
My ladies, when they are just beginning to think of going broody, will make a nice nest of straw and lay an egg in the same spot every day. If I wanted more eggs from more of my ducks I'd gather them from whatever random spot they were laid and add them in the nest the broody was creating.

You can't exactly force her to go broody but you can try and encourage her along. I feel like one sign that one of my girls want to go broody is that she gets angrier and louder. Normally they don't care much when I bring feed/water/etc. but when one is thinking of being broody she gets all worked up when I get anywhere near her nest spot and honks and her neck feathers will stand up and it's obvious I'm not wanted around.
 

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