Integrating a single duck that thinks its a chicken into a younger duck flock

LtDanFan

In the Brooder
Apr 16, 2025
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ok, so this may be long please bear with me. I will try to keep things relevant but it’ll be specific as i would be willing to be there are few in my position.
Due to a series of unfortunate events (house fire with loss of brooder occupants, and then death of a shipped duckling which was supposed to replace brooder occupants with a gap in age between the ducklings) i find myself trying to integrate a single (lone survivor) duckling raised with chicks, ducklings of the same age and ducklings 3 weeks younger than them into the same flock. So far the only duck survivor of the fire (L’orange) and the 5 surviving chicks have been stuck to each other like glue. I successfully integrated them into my flock of 4 hens and now they “share” a coop and yard. I have 4 ducklings in the brooder which are a couple weeks old and not yet ready to join the outside world (its still chilly here in SE Wisconsin) and newly hatched chicks with 3 more ducklings on the way. Key point is how do I best integrate the lone duck with other ducks even with it being the oldest and biggest of them? And are there any pointers to integrating ducklings and chicks raised together? Should i let them be one flock, then separate them or integrate them separately then let them forage together (as is my plan once the yard fencing is complete)?
I realize that a mixed blessing about this whole situation is that the ducklings (even the newest ones) by necessity have been and are being raised with chicks (owing to only 1 brooder available for both species due to the timing) so allowing them to forage together in the yard will be less stressful but I am not sure how to integrate the one duck that was raised with chickens into a flock of ducks that is younger than it is. Maybe complicating this is that i know the purchased ducklings are all female, but the lone survivor was part of a straight (Pekin) run so i have no idea what its sex is.
I will say that at first once they were all in the same space, I thought i had 2 flocks… one being the older hens (purchased as older pullets or laying hens) and the youngins (survivors) but now they are sleeping in the same coop. Albeit on different sides.
How long do i have to toss any newcomers into the brooder to consider them “growing up” together and not have to worry about separating them for any length of time?
 
Anyone have any suggestions on what to do with a lone duck that did not grow up with other ducks? Time is getting close to getting L’Orange (the singleton) out with the rest of the ducks as the little ones i purchased from Metzer Farms are getting big enough to move outside permanently and their coop and enclosure is almost ready for them, but he sincerely thinks hes a chicken. I even have to put him in the water pan outside to cool off when the other ducks jump right in!! Even when i put the babies in a smaller exercise pen where they could all (ducks and chickens) could see each other, he was only mildly curious. Despite the opportunity to literally sit right next to the other ducks, he still chooses to segregate himself from other ducks and spend time with the pullets he grew up with.
My bf says I should just leave him with the chickens, but the chickens do not have a pool in their yard and I just know he would be happier if he could swim. Any suggestions?
 
Its about 8-10 weeks. Maybe several weeks older. I got it along with 4 others at TSC but the others all perished in the housefire the day we were set to move them outside, so this one was raised as a lone duck among the chicks i had in the brooder which also survived. Looks close to full size and is definitely fully feathered, but has no idea that its a duck lol.
Also, not sure if its relevent but the duck is unsexed (presumed to be a male) and all of the new ducklings are female (ordered as such). For what its worth, it seems to be thoroughly integrated into its juvenile chicken flock and has not ever been a bully with the adult hens it got thrown in when the other pullets got kicked out of the brooder.
 
Its about 8-10 weeks. Maybe several weeks older. I got it along with 4 others at TSC but the others all perished in the housefire the day we were set to move them outside, so this one was raised as a lone duck among the chicks i had in the brooder which also survived. Looks close to full size and is definitely fully feathered, but has no idea that its a duck lol.
Also, not sure if it’s relevent but the duck is unsexed (presumed to be a male) and all of the new ducklings are female (ordered as such). For what its worth, it seems to be thoroughly integrated into its juvenile chicken flock and has not ever been a bully with the adult hens it got thrown in when the other pullets got kicked out of the brooder.
So you want to integrate the lone duck with ducklings that a few weeks younger (if I understand correctly)?
If so, I’d just put the duck in with them - the sooner it learns it is a duck, the better.

Or are the other ducklings the little ones that haven’t moved outside yet?
If so, then the duck could stay with the chickens until the ducklings mature a bit, or until it turns out to be a drake.

Hope this helps. I’ve never experienced this situation myself, but I hope one of the experts will chime in soon :).
 
That helps, i’ve never been in this situation before either, and did not expect to but life has other plans for us sometimes.
Yes, you are correct…the lone duck is older than the other ducks it will be living with, some are close to 6-8 weeks and being fully feathered and some are about 4 weeks old but growing fast and they all get along since they’ve been in the same brooder all along. So far all of the ducks (besides the lone duck, L’Orange) are getting along despite their respective age differences. And all of the younger ducks are female, but not sure if that matters much at this age though. I only assume L’Orange is a male, quiet quack, light colored bill but no drake feather yet, so i am still waiting. And as long as “he” doesn’t harass my females (or either species), he can stay.
The other ducklings are ready to go outside (waiting on the coop to be finished so they can be locked up at night) and L’Orange has been outside full time (including being locked up in the coop with the chickens at night) for the last month or so.
For more information, the duck and chicken yards are separate. I was hoping to allow them to forage in far back yard together, but they will be locked up separately at night. But that’s TBD.


If L’Orange does indeed to turn out to be a drake, does your advice change? Should i still toss them together and see what happens?
 
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Anyone have any suggestions on what to do with a lone duck that did not grow up with other ducks? Time is getting close to getting L’Orange (the singleton) out with the rest of the ducks as the little ones i purchased from Metzer Farms are getting big enough to move outside permanently and their coop and enclosure is almost ready for them, but he sincerely thinks hes a chicken. I even have to put him in the water pan outside to cool off when the other ducks jump right in!! Even when i put the babies in a smaller exercise pen where they could all (ducks and chickens) could see each other, he was only mildly curious. Despite the opportunity to literally sit right next to the other ducks, he still chooses to segregate himself from other ducks and spend time with the pullets he grew up with.
My bf says I should just leave him with the chickens, but the chickens do not have a pool in their yard and I just know he would be happier if he could swim. Any suggestions?
I would leave it, or try to break it's whole reality by teaching it it's a duck
 

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