Quote:
I have their waterer on a dish (OK - the top of a dollar-store storage container - I'm ghetto), which rests on several cheap microfiber shop towels, so they only manage to get the towels and the shavings immediately under them soaked. The rest of the brooder stays dry. The dish in the photo (another dollar store storage container) has a little bit of warm water in it to amuse them while I set their waterer and feeder to rights. They go crazy sticking their little bills in it and all trying to climb into it at once, but they don't have enough to swim by any stretch of the imagination. Gotta love 'em. I had a horrible day at work yesterday, so I came home and watched them for a while, and things were better. Hooray for poultry therapy!
I need to pick up a pack of bed protectors, since they're less expensive than puppy pads. I used them under the chicks' shavings, and they were great for full changes - I just rolled 'em up like a big, sort of icky burrito and tossed them.
Have you tried putting a cookie sheet under the water bin? That helped when my duckies were little....kept the mess local so I didn't have to change ALL the shavings every day.
You could consider brooding them on old sheets/towels that can be thrown in the washer/dryer when soiled. (Shake poop outside first) Someone said they did that with their chicks and it worked well.
Ducklings raised apart from adult ducks are not waterproof until they are about 6 weeks old. They can get waterlogged if they are allowed to "swim" before that age. But they do love to swim, you just have to dry their fluff off (yes, I did that for 4 weeks, every day...I also only used warm water for them to swim in...am I crazy or WHAT? ) Ducks raised by their mother are waterproof almost as soon as they are dry from hatching because their momma puts oil, from her oil gland, on their fluff. And they sit under her and get oil that way too, so my research said.![]()
I love ducklings. Ducks? Not so much...messy, poopy things.
I have their waterer on a dish (OK - the top of a dollar-store storage container - I'm ghetto), which rests on several cheap microfiber shop towels, so they only manage to get the towels and the shavings immediately under them soaked. The rest of the brooder stays dry. The dish in the photo (another dollar store storage container) has a little bit of warm water in it to amuse them while I set their waterer and feeder to rights. They go crazy sticking their little bills in it and all trying to climb into it at once, but they don't have enough to swim by any stretch of the imagination. Gotta love 'em. I had a horrible day at work yesterday, so I came home and watched them for a while, and things were better. Hooray for poultry therapy!
I need to pick up a pack of bed protectors, since they're less expensive than puppy pads. I used them under the chicks' shavings, and they were great for full changes - I just rolled 'em up like a big, sort of icky burrito and tossed them.
Last edited: