The ducks love the tiny leaves. I tried it as directed and it is not my taste. The duck-yard is full of these plants and also the small-leaved variant.Nice broadleaf plantain ...![]()
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The ducks love the tiny leaves. I tried it as directed and it is not my taste. The duck-yard is full of these plants and also the small-leaved variant.Nice broadleaf plantain ...![]()
Sounds like your doing everything you can!Thanks for dropping in @shawluvsbirds .
This is what we're doing:
- vitamin concentrate in water (a broad set of vit's / minerals; let's say this is something like "rooster booster" in the USA)
- main food is peas (bcs she prefers them and can eat a lot; also some corn)
- sprinkled with yeast (B complex) and finely ground eggshells (calcium)
- kept in a dog crate inside the duck house overnight for safety
- kept in a very large dog crate most of the day so that we're sure she's eating and drinking and how much (the other ducks gravitate towards her although they also do long-range trips around the property)
- let out of that crate for an hour or two to try and get some exercise (running to catch up with the group when it moves).
Most of the above has been going on for the last week and a half.
The little duck has grown overall and its large feathers are growing. But no real progress yet about walking. Can run for 15 ft, then gets into the hunchback pose as seen in the video, staggers for 2 more steps and drops, then needs to rest for a moment before it can be raised to move again.
Mostly she just sits in one place when out of the crate unless the flock is on the move. Picks half-heartedly at grass, doesn't approach food or water basins. Is then transferred back to the crate where she eats and drinks just fine.
One explanation would be that she was bullied heavily by stronger ducks in her original home so she's just super passive when in a group - although she does want to be a part of it; runs to join them, calls to them when they move away, etc.
The 5 older ducks attacked her when we first brought her home. They pestered the 2 (somewhat older) ducks that came with her as well but not by far to the same degree. Now they don't anymore but maybe that was just one bad experience too many.
Our next move will be what @WannaBeHillBilly suggested - we seem to be thinking along similar lines: water based exercise, ie. we'll fill a grape picking tub with water high enough so that she has to paddle and just drop her in (while standing by of course).
@Canadian Wind - Here is the reason why i don't dare to touch Violeta Duck's duckling:
Do you see that tiny cloud of smoke over her nostrils? Come a little closer and you will get fifth degree burns…
A wider angle picture shows that the dragon's tail is spreaded out which is a sure sign that she is ready and willing to attack, smoke still lingering over her nostrils…![]()
They will also bury them in the bedding.They are in the house about 9 pm to 6 am and half of one side of the house is a full height chicken wire door which lets in the light fully and is south-east oriented. Also some vent openings in the corners but those are small.
My eyesight is not really olympic but the eggs should be large and white, I think I should be able to notice ... or maybe one of these days there will be somebody visiting and go oooh what's with all the eggs
The underside of the house is blocked with a wire mesh; there are some semi-hidden spaces in the bushes inside the orchard so I'll take a closer look just in case.
Oh yes, they do! - Sometimes i find them when cleaning out the duck-house after months and when they break…They will also bury them in the bedding.