Wicked Storm
Songster
- Aug 10, 2019
- 395
- 779
- 192
Hi all! I just wanted to post a reminder for anyone on here trying to rehabilitate babies (mostly ducks and geese) from the wild, and the reason that we let rehabilitators do the job in honor of my baby Luckys Gotcha day!
I got Lucky, (male mallard) on July 5th of 2021. He was dropped by a hawk out of the sky and actually made it. An older couple found Lucky as a tiny baby on their porch and decided to try to raise him.
While taken care of with lots of love, he wasn’t given the proper care he needed. He ended up not developing properly and had a vitamin deficiency and a respiratory issue when I got him seven weeks later after they decided they couldn’t keep him anymore.
Wild species aren’t meant to be pets, and while they look cute and cuddly they deserve to be free, and unless you can raise and rehabilitate them for the wild please give them to a rehabber who can do those things.
Lucky was a very domesticated duck but with revertive training in the wild he is now a wild and thriving duck! I do revertive training because I have lots of wild and friendly ducks that come around and made friends with Lucky!
Lucky is very healthy and happy out in the wild now and comes by for a visit every now and then, however he doesn’t really remember me.
Here is Lucky when I got him at 7 weeks old (as you can see, he hadn’t even developed wings)
And Lucky after he grew up!
I got Lucky, (male mallard) on July 5th of 2021. He was dropped by a hawk out of the sky and actually made it. An older couple found Lucky as a tiny baby on their porch and decided to try to raise him.
While taken care of with lots of love, he wasn’t given the proper care he needed. He ended up not developing properly and had a vitamin deficiency and a respiratory issue when I got him seven weeks later after they decided they couldn’t keep him anymore.
Wild species aren’t meant to be pets, and while they look cute and cuddly they deserve to be free, and unless you can raise and rehabilitate them for the wild please give them to a rehabber who can do those things.
Lucky was a very domesticated duck but with revertive training in the wild he is now a wild and thriving duck! I do revertive training because I have lots of wild and friendly ducks that come around and made friends with Lucky!
Lucky is very healthy and happy out in the wild now and comes by for a visit every now and then, however he doesn’t really remember me.
Here is Lucky when I got him at 7 weeks old (as you can see, he hadn’t even developed wings)
And Lucky after he grew up!