- Thread starter
- #81
FernbergFarms
Songster
Okay. Yeah that’s what I thought. Especially the boys.
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I think it would be good to have the duck brooder within sight and sound of the adults. Monitor your ducks frequently during the day and watch for signs of chilling or over heating. A smart phone thermometer to check is nice, but observing the birds is best. I am not an expert on ducks( or anything really)! I have raised some, a couple times, with success, years ago! Generally, I tend to over protective, if anything, on all my birds! I hope to see pictures and to hear happy things soon!Thank you! I’m thinking I’ll only have a heat lamp on at night...?do you guys think if I kept their brooder in the duck house where the big duck are it would be okay? The big ducks wouldn’t be able to get in it; they would just hear them.
sounds fine.Thank you! I’m thinking I’ll only have a heat lamp on at night...?do you guys think if I kept their brooder in the duck house where the big duck are it would be okay? The big ducks wouldn’t be able to get in it; they would just hear them.
It is a common practice in the retail hatchery business to have other growers, supply some of their diverse offerings. The better hatcheries will carefully vet the supplier. Many do not hatch all of the Ducks, Peafowl,Guineas or exotics, themselves , nor all of the chicken breeds they offer, sometimes! Murray Mcmurray hatches a lot of chicken breeds, but do you really think they breed and hatch exotic cranes, call ducks, vulturine Guineas and all the other diverse offerings? Their staff would have to be huge and they would need to be experts and care for a lot of animals that are not compatible with chickens! I seldom see any Hatchery specifically point out, that they do not breed/hatch all of their offerings! Some of the suppliers of chicks and etc. do not hatch most of what they sell retail and are mostly just middlemen/brokers! Some that hatch many thousands of chicks of commercial breeds wholesale, do not hatch but a handful of breeds, themselves! I also point out that, by jet airplane, the difference on delivery time in route from places 2000 miles further away, only translates to about 4 hours more travel time! They don't go by train anymore! The reputable hatcheries strive to handle your baby birds with care and expedite shipment by USPS air delivery and use only responsible partners in their business. When problems arise, they back their stated warranty and you must not blame them for USPS mishandling! Buy your birds locally, when possible, from reputable and clean flocks! However, I never would of enjoyed so many different breeds without Mail Order birds, many from Murray Mcmurray! In the days before the internet, the retail mail order chick hatchery business, almost died off in the 1970's. You found only a very few, tiny, adds in the popular magazines of the days, offering mail order chicks/birds. Most of the people in their rush off the farms in the 1940s through the 60's, abandoned all aspects of farm life, including chickens! Thanks, to the, just a handful of hatcheries, surviving (like MM), we have kept some of the heirloom breeds going, through the dark ages of the post agricultural period of the "Jetson's" age of the 1960's and 1970's. I am thankful for them.