One more question. Sorry! This one about $$$.

I try to keep the feed separate, but the chickens sneak out and eat the duck/goose food. I have:
60 adult chickens
30 juvenile chickens
12 week old chicks
2 Pomeranian Geese
8 Ducks (2 Rouen, 5 Runner, 1 Ancona)
3 Guinea Fowl

This is the feed I buy in a month: All my birds, except juveniles/chicks, free range daily:
5 bags of Layer Crumbles (50#) @13.00/bag
2 bags of Layer Pellets (50#-during laying season for the geese....otherwise 1 gamebird feed mixed with 1 layer pellet)@12.95 a bag
1 bag of wheat for the ducks/geese to mix with their feed (during the winter only) @ 12.50 a bag
3 bags Starter/Grower (50#) @14.00 a bag
2 Bags Scratch Grains (50#) @14.50 a bag for the brand I like


So, combined that is 650 pounds of feed a month divided by 115 fowl and divided by 30 days= .188 pounds or roughly 1/3 cup per day during the winter.
I eliminate the wheat and one bag of scratch during the summer and their feed consumption = .159 pounds or a bit less that 1/3 cup per day during the summer.

Their are a lot of variables, such as size of the breed, time of year, free ranging, supplementing their diet with leftover produce or in the case of chickens table scraps. However, you should be able to safely get up to 6 ducks without breaking the bank. I would think that one 50# bag would last a month with some supplemental grains.

Prior to breeding season, my geese were actually the most economical of all my birds: They rarely visited the food dish and spent much of their time munching their pasture. The winter grass is just coming in and the summer grass is dying...plus it's breeding season, so they have been parked at the food dish for the past few weeks.

One thing to consider is the offset from eggs though. Out of the 60 chickens, 48 are hens, out of the ducks 5 are hens, and one of my geese is female. The ducks are my best layers: I get an average of 4 eggs a day from the 5 hens. I sell both chicken and duck eggs (2.25/dz for chicken 3.50/dz for duck). If I consider the eggs we eat and no longer have to buy, plus the egg sales, I am only out of pocket about $20 for the feed per month right now...probably because I have so many juveniles and chicks at this point.

So far with the ducks, my biggest expense was their housing. Our simple duck house quickly turned into a really cute cabin, which tripled the costs. We can see it from the windows in our living room so wanted something nice. The cost is worth it though since I know they are safe at night and their house is really cute sitting out by the pond we dug for them.

Also, if you are letting them free range, you may need fencing. We had to fence off a wooded section of our property: We got a brave raccoon that came out during the day and was snatching anything that wandered into the edge of the woods. We lost 4 chickens and a Black Swedish drake before we stopped him and got the fence fully installed. The fencing also slows down/stops stray dogs and feral cats. We got the geese to protect the ducks from hawks and they have been very effective so far.

Good luck to you and your family. I hope you find the right breed and proper number of ducks!
 
Road trip?
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25 chickens, 8 ducks, 7 turkeys, and 2 guineas go through two bags of Purina Flock Raiser a week here, plus assorted oyster shell, scratch grains, frozen peas, mealworms, kitchen scraps, and whatever they scrounge free ranging (not much). The turkeys really tip the scale, though.
 
Figure .4 pounds of feed per duck. You'll have to call the feed store and see what feed costs in your area. Ducks are capable of eating more, but they don't need more, so that will be your top figure, if you weigh feed and control wild birds and vermin so nobody eats your feed but the ducks.

Small breeds of duck need less. They will need less if they have good access to edible plants and bugs. Probably during winter, they will need the full amount.

Figures are for good quality balance feed. If you want to feed junk, then I don't know how much feed it would take.

If you are budgeting, figure the most it would cost and use those figures. If you get by with less, you'll be OK. If you figure too little and get too many ducks, then you have a problem.
 
I've got 8 adult ducks (6 females, 5 of whom are laying daily). I go through a 30 kg bag of feed about every 3 weeks in winter and 4 weeks in the warmer months (30kg = 66 pounds). I have 5 chickens too that eat a bit. So my ducks eat about 2.75 pounds of feed each per week or about 0.4 pounds a day. They are confined most of the day in a pen.

I pay $30 for 66 pounds of quality feed here. The cheapest feed you can buy here is about $22 per 66 pounds.
 

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