- Jan 28, 2010
- 24
- 0
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Questions:
1. How can you estimate the age of an adult goose?
2. What should I feed my geese while they are locked up?
3. Are my feral cats a danger to my geese (I have over 50 TNR cats that have free choice cat food)
4. How long do I need to keep my geese confined?
5. What can I do to protect my geese if I can't be there to let them in and out?
6. Is there anything special that the geese need other than the obvious food/water/shelter?
My story:
Years ago I had a goose that was about half white and grey with blue eyes and 3 solid grey geese. i ahve no clue which ones were male or female, but they would disappear and then show up with 8-10 goslings each year which would slowly disappear (occassionally they raised 1-2) and then they would do it again the next year. They came up near the barn to sleep and spent the day in the creek. I never specifically gave them any kind of feed, but they did come up and eat some of the scraps I threw out for the chickens and some of the corn I dumped for the pigs. Eventually I moved and the geese stayed with the place. I really miss my pretty blue eyed goose so when I got a place with a nice big pond I started dreaming of blue eyed geese - after some research I found Ebdens to be white with blue eyes, but wasn't able to find any locally so I was just waiting for the right opportunity and planning to set up for them better. I have about 10 fenced acres with horses. There are 5 large barns and 2 houses on the property and it is fenced and cross fenced with old board fence and stock wire and I am slowly running electric all the way around. There is a large collection of feral cats (over 50) that I have had trapped, fixed, and vaccinated. The cats have free choice dry food at all times, but they do run loose.
My geese:
Alright, now to my new geese - I went to a poultry auction with a friend and there was a big cage of geese - long story short I found my blue eyed goose, but he kept screaming for the grey goose that sold before him and the grey goose kept screaming for him (she even bloodied her beak trying to get to him). It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out they wanted to be together and I convinced the person (for a $6 profit) to sell me the grey goose they were planning to eat. When I put them back together they made the cutest little noises and cuddled. The geese are very docile (at least compared to my last geese) and let me pet them and carry them around, but don't come up to me for attention. They don't run from me or hiss at me they simply walk calmly away. I currently have the geese in a 10X12 horse stall with a tub (about 15 gallons) of water, a 3 quart pail of water, a 5 gallon heated bucket of water, a dish of oyster shell, a dish of grit, a dish of cat food, a dish with alfalfa hay, a dish of horse sweet feed, a dish of water fowl pellets (with 6 brewer's yeast tablets that the lady at the feed store told me to add), and a dish of cracked corn. So far my geese have made a mess with their water and they did drink a whole lot, but they really haven't eaten much of anything. I did put a dog crate with a shipping blanket over it so they had somewhere to hide, but I haven't seen them go in there at all. I have been reading and reading and I'm pretty sure that they are healthy, that they are adults, and that they are pilgrim geese. Beyond that I am lost. I'm not sure how long to keep them penned up before turning them loose and now there are Canadian geese at the pond so I'm not sure if that will be a problem. I have no clue how old they are, but I assume that they are a mated pair. I have ordered a book on geese, but it will not be here for another week and I'm going nuts - ANY and ALL advice would be GREATLY appreciated.
Thanks!
Becky
1. How can you estimate the age of an adult goose?
2. What should I feed my geese while they are locked up?
3. Are my feral cats a danger to my geese (I have over 50 TNR cats that have free choice cat food)
4. How long do I need to keep my geese confined?
5. What can I do to protect my geese if I can't be there to let them in and out?
6. Is there anything special that the geese need other than the obvious food/water/shelter?
My story:
Years ago I had a goose that was about half white and grey with blue eyes and 3 solid grey geese. i ahve no clue which ones were male or female, but they would disappear and then show up with 8-10 goslings each year which would slowly disappear (occassionally they raised 1-2) and then they would do it again the next year. They came up near the barn to sleep and spent the day in the creek. I never specifically gave them any kind of feed, but they did come up and eat some of the scraps I threw out for the chickens and some of the corn I dumped for the pigs. Eventually I moved and the geese stayed with the place. I really miss my pretty blue eyed goose so when I got a place with a nice big pond I started dreaming of blue eyed geese - after some research I found Ebdens to be white with blue eyes, but wasn't able to find any locally so I was just waiting for the right opportunity and planning to set up for them better. I have about 10 fenced acres with horses. There are 5 large barns and 2 houses on the property and it is fenced and cross fenced with old board fence and stock wire and I am slowly running electric all the way around. There is a large collection of feral cats (over 50) that I have had trapped, fixed, and vaccinated. The cats have free choice dry food at all times, but they do run loose.
My geese:
Alright, now to my new geese - I went to a poultry auction with a friend and there was a big cage of geese - long story short I found my blue eyed goose, but he kept screaming for the grey goose that sold before him and the grey goose kept screaming for him (she even bloodied her beak trying to get to him). It didn't take a rocket scientist to figure out they wanted to be together and I convinced the person (for a $6 profit) to sell me the grey goose they were planning to eat. When I put them back together they made the cutest little noises and cuddled. The geese are very docile (at least compared to my last geese) and let me pet them and carry them around, but don't come up to me for attention. They don't run from me or hiss at me they simply walk calmly away. I currently have the geese in a 10X12 horse stall with a tub (about 15 gallons) of water, a 3 quart pail of water, a 5 gallon heated bucket of water, a dish of oyster shell, a dish of grit, a dish of cat food, a dish with alfalfa hay, a dish of horse sweet feed, a dish of water fowl pellets (with 6 brewer's yeast tablets that the lady at the feed store told me to add), and a dish of cracked corn. So far my geese have made a mess with their water and they did drink a whole lot, but they really haven't eaten much of anything. I did put a dog crate with a shipping blanket over it so they had somewhere to hide, but I haven't seen them go in there at all. I have been reading and reading and I'm pretty sure that they are healthy, that they are adults, and that they are pilgrim geese. Beyond that I am lost. I'm not sure how long to keep them penned up before turning them loose and now there are Canadian geese at the pond so I'm not sure if that will be a problem. I have no clue how old they are, but I assume that they are a mated pair. I have ordered a book on geese, but it will not be here for another week and I'm going nuts - ANY and ALL advice would be GREATLY appreciated.
Thanks!
Becky