Imprinting

You can have super friendly birds without imprinting. Muscovies are a great breed to start with--they are naturally bolder and less shy than mallard-derivatives (i.e., all other domestic ducks). One tried-and-true way to do it is to feed them off and on all day long from your hands. You can let them free feed the chicken starter, and hand-feed them treats--bird seed is a great choice, as well as worms, crickets, peas, etc.

The friendliest birds I ever met were a trio of Runner ducks (not generally one of the friendlier breeds) that were hatched & raised in an elementary school classroom. The children fed them by hand and carried them around ALL DAY LONG. Those birds were SO sweet. If you have time for imprinting, then you have time for this for sure. The more time you invest, the friendlier they will be.

Personally, I strongly recommend against attempting to truly imprint. A human-imprinted bird is a recipe for misery. If you were ever, for any reason, to have to find them a new home (moving into an apartment, going overseas, financial trouble, etc.), you would be hard-pressed to find someone who could be with them 24 hours a day, which is what an imprinted bird needs to feel secure. There are a few rare souls who can give an imprinted bird the 24-7 company and attention, and who don't mind the diapers and the inability to travel and so many other inconveniences... but they are rare.

It is true, however, that the younger you start, the more likely and the easier it will be to get them super friendly. It's also true that no matter what you do, they will go through stages where they seem more skittish. Stick with it and you'll end up with super sweet birds. :)

P.S. Geese can be awesome pets. They are naturally bold and friendly. They can also be aggressive. Do your homework before you get into it. The last thing you want is a bird who is super attached to you and who is attacking you daily. Unlike ducks, they can do serious damage if they set their minds to it. Just like imprinting, it *can* be done, but it takes work and you need to understand what you're doing. :)
 
I don't know where you are located, but there are some breeders all over in the US. You might have issues finding babies at this time of year.. Unless you try to get them shipped from somewhere warmer where they have geese laying now. I think Celtic is getting eggs now from them - though I can't say for sure.
I live in New Zealand, so, yeah.
I might be able to find some on trademe or something, but I doubt it since I didn't find any breeders.
 
are geese generally quiet?
are there any quiet breeds?
I live in a sub-sub-urban area so I need them to be quiet

The only breeds for sale that i can find so far in my country are
SEBASTOPOL
PILGRIM
ENGLISH GREY (GREYLAG)
CHINESE
and
CAPE BARREN

Are geese or ducks legal to own in your area? This would be my biggest concern since you really want them to imprint on you. As someone else said, an imprinted bird will be miserable if they have to be rehomed. If they are not legal, you need to think about what would happen if you are "caught" having them and then need to rehome them.

I've been there. I had ducks illegally before but was fortunate enough not to have anyone report them. But when I first had runners, we only had neighbors on 2 sides and they didn't care. I switched to muscovy because they were quiet and they are a meat bird.

I need them to no fly, pretty much for the same reason as I need them to be quiet

I suggest you really research the breeds and decide what may work for your situation. Even my muscovy, which are said to be mute, can be heard for a ways when the girls get going. Even clipping wings won't prevent some birds from being able to get over 6' fencing if the conditions are right.

I'm not trying to be harsh, I just want to make sure that you are able to really think about things first.
wink.png
 
There's nothing in the poultry by-law or whatever its called about not having geese or ducks, I can't see why it would be illegal to have pet ducks since wild ducks pretty much live around here anyway.
and no one's going to find out if I have virtually silent ducks anyway. I'm not so sure about geese though. I think we're going to see how he ducks go, anayway, because from now, as they get older they increase in value, and it would be better to give them a chance and get something out of it if it doesnt work out.
 
There's nothing in the poultry by-law or whatever its called about not having geese or ducks, I can't see why it would be illegal to have pet ducks since wild ducks pretty much live around here anyway.
and no one's going to find out if I have virtually silent ducks anyway. I'm not so sure about geese though. I think we're going to see how he ducks go, anayway, because from now, as they get older they increase in value, and it would be better to give them a chance and get something out of it if it doesnt work out.
Geese have a much higher value than ducks. Ducks are worth about the same as chickens here.
 
Geese have a much higher value than ducks. Ducks are worth about the same as chickens here.
Yeah but we don't have geese yet, so we can't sell them.
If that's what you meant.
 
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I think I got confused. Thinking you would try the ducks as they'd be higher in value if it doesn't work out. Whoops! :)
haha no i just meant;
since we already have them, we may as well wait until they're worth more to sell.
 

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