- Aug 4, 2009
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Okay, so having just raised up three lovely khaki campbells (not done growing up actually, they are two months old), two questionable little ducklings have landed in my lap. They were two days old when I got them, and are now a week old. One of them, Flopsy, is almost but not quite certainly a Welsh Harlequin. The other, Mopsy, is almost but not quite certainly a mix of Welsh Harlequin and Khaki Campbell. Flopsy is the tiniest duckling I've ever seen. They hatched on the same day, but it's half the size of Mopsy. And Flopsy wasn't in great shape when she (hopeful gender pronoun) arrived, with impacted feces that I spent the first night painstakingly dealing with until the poor little thing was finally able to poop (it was a huge horribly foul poop from a duck the size of a golf ball). They are being fed duck starter with yeast and I don't think the tiny one's small size is from nutrient deficiency, I think she's just runty (do ducks have runts?).
Anyhow, unlike the the khaki campbells that were perfectly contented with each other as ducklings, these two are only at ease when we are in the room with them. They peep pitifully and loudly whenever there isn't a person with them. Flopsy follows Mospy around, but Mopsy gets no comfort from Flopsy. It's like the stories of people raising up a single duckling. I now have a small cage that I put them in to bring them with me when I can't be in the room that their bigger nursery is in, but there are times when I cannot be with them and it's heartbreaking.
Any insight as to when they become more independent if so imprinted on people?
Anyhow, unlike the the khaki campbells that were perfectly contented with each other as ducklings, these two are only at ease when we are in the room with them. They peep pitifully and loudly whenever there isn't a person with them. Flopsy follows Mospy around, but Mopsy gets no comfort from Flopsy. It's like the stories of people raising up a single duckling. I now have a small cage that I put them in to bring them with me when I can't be in the room that their bigger nursery is in, but there are times when I cannot be with them and it's heartbreaking.
Any insight as to when they become more independent if so imprinted on people?

(soon my ducklings will know more about world news than me)