Wisconsin Winter, Ducks, and Water

Skysang

In the Brooder
Joined
Aug 7, 2025
Messages
3
Reaction score
18
Points
26
I am in Wisconsin and new to ducks. This is my first winter with them and I want to make sure they are happy and healthy. I have read some threads on here with regard to ducks, winter, and water. We do not have a pond and have been using a baby pool. Temperatures are currently forecast to be just above freezing (33⁰F - 37⁰F). It sounds as though, once the temperatures are below 32⁰F, it is ok to put the pool away for winter as long as the ducks can dunk their heads in water so they can eat properly. Is this correct? They will be ok without the pool for a few months? Should I pull the pool out on occasion? Thank you.
 
I have runner ducks in North Central Iowa where my winters are likely as cold as yours. I put away baby pools for winter and make sure the ducks have water in insulated dog dishes that are deep enough for them to get their heads dunked. There are multiple dishes so I can rotate thawed and frozen ones, although the ducks pop their heads in the water often enough that it rarely freezes solid.

I used to use heated dog dishes and ran electricity from the house through long, outdoor extension cords. That is, until one year, when one of the plugs fell into some melting snow and began smoking. No harm done, except to my heart!!

I leave the pool -- and their stock tank -- in the garage until spring. I've also used black, rubber dishes that help retain heat to keep the water from freezing -- as long as my little darlings don't tip them over in their enthusiastic glee.

My first winter with ducks I worried about how they would handle the cold. They quickly showed me as they abandoned their warm shelter to lie in falling snow. Best wishes with yours!
 
I have runner ducks in North Central Iowa where my winters are likely as cold as yours. I put away baby pools for winter and make sure the ducks have water in insulated dog dishes that are deep enough for them to get their heads dunked. There are multiple dishes so I can rotate thawed and frozen ones, although the ducks pop their heads in the water often enough that it rarely freezes solid.

I used to use heated dog dishes and ran electricity from the house through long, outdoor extension cords. That is, until one year, when one of the plugs fell into some melting snow and began smoking. No harm done, except to my heart!!

I leave the pool -- and their stock tank -- in the garage until spring. I've also used black, rubber dishes that help retain heat to keep the water from freezing -- as long as my little darlings don't tip them over in their enthusiastic glee.

My first winter with ducks I worried about how they would handle the cold. They quickly showed me as they abandoned their warm shelter to lie in falling snow. Best wishes with yours!
Thank you! I will be putting up the pool today. We do have deep dishes that their heads fit in and I feel better about them using just those.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom