First, my apologies for just now answering your post to me. I'm so behind on my gazillion emails it'd crazy. I hope you found a way to solve your problems with the aggressive birds. I solved ours with the geese. I did all 3 of them tho a couple of older men who have 56 animals out of a farm and they said they have other geese like them, and know the ganders can be aggressive. I don't miss the noisy things at all. I now have 7 new wonderful, gentle chickens occupying that penThanks.Good information on the fish. I'd like to give them to my ducks and geese actually. We have 6 Welch Harlequins and 3 geese-a mean Toulouse gander and 2 hens that are African and Toulouse mixes that were given to us. The girls are good, but we just aren't sure we are going to be able to keep the gander. It takes both of us to go into the pen just to gather eggs. We've tried alot of behavior modification. It works for about 5 seconds at a time, but we dare not turn our backs on him. He was so sweet and gentle when we rescued him. We can't figure out what has made him so mean. We give him lots of room, although we can't allow the geese to free range yet as we aren't set up for that. Once we get things changed around, I'm afraid still to let him out, not just bc of my own fear of getting bitten and flogged again, but fear he might attack the ducks, who do free range separately even now. I hate the thought of processing him, but it's looking more and more that will be his fate.I can't live with an aggressive animal on the property.Plus I'm losing eggs from my girls bc Michael is working away 5 days a week, so I can't get in there to retrieve the daily eggs. Grrr Boy oh boy, if anyone has any suggestions on taming a gander, I'm all ears.And sorry I veered off the subject here.
I've been told and read that my swans are going to be the same way when they start breeding and eggs/cygnets are involved. Have no idea how I'll deal with it. Gracie and Gunther have a large safe house/run where they stay nights. Door opens into their yard with pool for day use. How will I walk them in before dark with them trying to kill me? How will I clean and maintain their habitat? I was attacked last year by a 5 year old Emerald Spalding (Green Species) peacock I raised from a chick. I was entering the pen with a garbage can lid during breeding season to protect myself. He'd calmed down some when mating ceased so was off guard when he left a high roost and got me in the head. Husband rushed me to the doctor with blood running down my face. It was a horrible experience. Maybe the imprint of him on me had something to do with it. He now lives on a 100 acre ranch in Goliad, TX and I didn't shed a tear when he left, LOL!!! I don't think that kind of temperament in an animal can be changed.
