She usually only takes about one a week. I gave her a talking to about being piggy. She may not move for a couple days.
Maybe she's gravid and extra hungry, haha. Stealing eggs so she can make her own eggs.
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She usually only takes about one a week. I gave her a talking to about being piggy. She may not move for a couple days.
I did wonder that. It is that time of year. Baby fawns everywhere and two little piggies playing in the yard yesterday.Maybe she's gravid and extra hungry, haha. Stealing eggs so she can make her own eggs.
That sounds exactly like little Peepeep! She/He would also run with the other five ducks, then lay down and forget the world around, did not eat or drink and fell more and more behind with her development. At this time (2018) i had no experience with duck, otherwise we would not have lost her.Yes, we're worried whether on balance she's making progress or not.
She will run, even quite quickly, to stay with the flock wherever they go. Or at least run until the batteries run out, then take a few slow steps and plop down.
The trouble is, once she has stopped and the flock is around her or nearby, she just won't do much. She doesn't do all the duck behaviors when the others do - bathing, foraging, drilling holes, drinking and eating - you know how ducks normally do everything as a group. Not her.
Once in a while will she remember to get up and maybe take some water and peck a little at food; but very tentatively. The only time we can get her to reliably eat at least something is overnight when she's in the crate inside the duck house.
I'm enclosing a photo of dinner that was served for the past night - chicken crumble, corn, barley, cooked peas and vitamin water. She drank half of the water and all of the food except for the crumble of which only half was taken. You can estimate the quantity by looking at the corn and peas.
I read up on niacin stability under heat (I know some of the B's are not happy about that) and it seems OK, so your rice hint looks like it should work fine, we'll try that. It is presumably also resilent to air and sunlight so my "let's put vitamins in every water basin over the day" thing seems OK too.
Junior is not really fully feathered and not really waterproof; there was a rainshower yesterday, she looked very wet and was cleaning herself constantly for hours after. We sometimes just grab her and pour water over her beak or dunk her head so the nares would be OK - since she doesn't seem intent on doing it. I don't even know if we're doing anything good with that.
All the other ducks seem to be in fine shape. The other 2 newcomers have integrated well, we very rarely see them being pecked at by the original ducks anymore and they fully take part in all group activities.
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Just 32°? - I don't use the AC until outside temperatures approach 40° - rarely happens here. Or the humidity becomes unbearable.Salutations, all. We'll be having a high of 32c / 83f today. I'll be inside where the A/C can keep me at a more normal temperature.
That would have been a nice omlette!Posted this in another thread but thought you guys might want to see it. Miss snake got greedy this morning and had four eggs.
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She usually just eats one and then curls up in the duck nest to digest. She's very tame and to get her out of the coop I have to pick her up and relocate her. They are supposed to musk you with very stinky stuff but she hasnt.That would have been a nice omlette!
It gets a lot warmer than that inside, believe me. And with eggs in the incubator, I need to keep the interior temperature at a certain level or else I'll end up with balut!Just 32°? - I don't use the AC until outside temperatures approach 40° - rarely happens here. Or the humidity becomes unbearable.
Ah, i forgot you're in a trailer. Yes, you're right those heat up pretty bad! Fortunately the house i live in had been built in a time when workers took pride in their results of their work. Outside walls made from cinder-blocks, filled with mortar and iron rods. That keeps the house much colder than the outside.It gets a lot warmer than that inside, believe me. And with eggs in the incubator, I need to keep the interior temperature at a certain level or else I'll end up with balut!
oh my goodness i have the same exact thing going on here!Pandemonium in the Duck-House!
Broody Ducks are crazy! @shawluvsbirds
For whatever reason Buffzilla duck decided that having a nest-mountain in the corner is not good enough and started to move her nest more to the middle of the - hm - let's call it balcony:
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That was before i hastily added that piece of wood that you can see acting as a reiling on the picture above. And of course eggs dropped from the upper level into the straw below where Violeta Duck hastily secured them into her own nest!
So now i have two Ducks, sitting on nests, containing eggs in all kind of development stages…- Makes the CCI looking more and more necessary, more on that thing later…
Here is Buffzilla rebuilding her nest:
Of course now her eggs are evenly distibuted everywhere between the corner and the middle of the balcony…
Oh, and by the way while i was securing the make-shift reiling, Violeta Duck happily ate my left leg…