wayfarer
Hatching
I'm brand new to the forum (been lurking for about a year) and I've been searching, but didn't really find what I was looking for--
We have two Toulouse; one we got last year as a gosling who we are not sure of the sex, and an approximately three year old female we got this year.
We got the female this year because we assumed our original was a gander, as we hadn't seen eggs yet, while our ducks had started laying.
since then, on many occasions we have seen two goose eggs a day, so we've been wondering if our suspected gander is actually not.
The three year old (Houdini is the name she came with) has gone super broody - pulling feathers to line the nest, won't leave the nest, VERY vocal when you bother her, etc.
My wife is suggesting we let her keep the eggs to see if they'll hatch.
Is it true that the birds sort of "know" when the eggs are fertile ?
I've seen the younger goose (we just call him / her "Goose Goose") exhibit behavior like the drakes, but only to the ducks, never to the goose. My wife saw Houdini and Goose Goose trade spots so Houdini could get food and water
any thoughts ?
They have free range of the backyard, Should I start creatively penning them to try to isolate eggs / behaviors ? I'd like to figure out once and for all the sex of our Goose Goose !
We have two Toulouse; one we got last year as a gosling who we are not sure of the sex, and an approximately three year old female we got this year.
We got the female this year because we assumed our original was a gander, as we hadn't seen eggs yet, while our ducks had started laying.
since then, on many occasions we have seen two goose eggs a day, so we've been wondering if our suspected gander is actually not.
The three year old (Houdini is the name she came with) has gone super broody - pulling feathers to line the nest, won't leave the nest, VERY vocal when you bother her, etc.
My wife is suggesting we let her keep the eggs to see if they'll hatch.
Is it true that the birds sort of "know" when the eggs are fertile ?
I've seen the younger goose (we just call him / her "Goose Goose") exhibit behavior like the drakes, but only to the ducks, never to the goose. My wife saw Houdini and Goose Goose trade spots so Houdini could get food and water
any thoughts ?
They have free range of the backyard, Should I start creatively penning them to try to isolate eggs / behaviors ? I'd like to figure out once and for all the sex of our Goose Goose !
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