Showing posts with label Ducks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ducks. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Duck Houses...


Now with our newly dredged duck pond down on the farm we can keep the Indian Runner ducks happy and well away from our waterlilies in the lake up at the park (for two springs in a row they have stunted the growth of our lilies by nibbling off the tender growing tips).


And with several new families of ducklings to accommodate...



 I think we should build some floating duck houses...

Maybe not on the same scale and an MP expenses scandal...

but befitting WBP none the less.

Monday, August 18, 2014

The Arrival Of The Peafowl...


Our Peafowl have just arrived and they are stunning. We have 1 peahen and 2 peacocks. They are only 12 weeks old, which is a good age to get them because they are large enough not to be vulnerable to small animals and larger birds, but young enough to tame / train.


They will now stay in their enclosure for several weeks until they have developed a homing sense to the park, and then we can start to let them free range a little.


We will need to build them a proper roost once they start to free range, to encourage them to stay where we want them too over night instead of in our neighbours' trees or our roof!




Monday, April 11, 2011

All grown up....


Now that our Indian Runners have grown up and have a good sense of 'home' we have been able to dismantle Stalag 13 and let them range around the whole farm. They return at evenings to their hutch for dinner, and despite being hand fed every day since they were chicks, are still very wary of people (this photos belies the difficulty in capturing them!).

Life remains hectic, frantically packing up the house in our spare time. We have until the 1st of July to vacate the premises, but as a friend bought it there is no panic. We have found a place to stay a 1/4 mile down the road from Willowbrook. We hope to stay their until the manor is completed (about a year from now).

No need to build the farrowing pen just yet - our sows deflated over night. We have been told that they must have had phantom pregnancies, but to get 2 sows both with phantoms at the same time is unusual. Let's hope they have better luck next time.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Everything's a box of fluffy ducks...

Apologies for the silent treatment of late. Work has been all consuming, and so has the business side of getting the build started (still on target for next month). We have been busy boxing up the house, redressing the rooms, and getting the gardens in order before we put our villa on the market. However, I do have one small piece of breaking news...

You may recall our post on Indian Runners a little while ago. We were expecting we would re-home some adult ducks, but instead we have come into five of the cutest ducklings...


We have constructed a brutally functional Stalag 13 for the ducklings at the park until they get their bearings, but then they will be on their way, free-ranging with the rest of the menagerie.

Monday, September 6, 2010

Indian Runners....


We have been offered some Indian Runner ducks for the park. Indian Runners are an unusual breed of domestic duck. They stand erect like penguins and, rather than waddle, they run. The females lay typically 150-200 eggs a year, or more depending whether they are from exhibition or utility strains. They were found on the Indonesian Islands where they were 'walked' to market and sold as egg-layers or for meat. These ducks do not fly and only rarely form nests and incubate their own eggs. They run or walk, often dropping their eggs wherever they happen to be. Duck-breeders need to house their birds over night or be extremely vigilant in picking up the eggs to prevent them from being taken by other animals. Keeping the birds in sheds until well after dawn is reportedly the best solution.
The ducks vary in weight between 1.4 and 2.3 kg (3-4 ½ lbs). Their height (from crown to tail tip) ranges from 50 cm (20 inches) in small females to about 66 cm (26 inches) in the taller males. The eggs are often greenish-white in color, but these too vary.

Indian Runners love foraging. They also like swimming in ponds and streams, but they are likely to be preoccupied in running around grassy meadows looking for worms, slugs, even catching flies. They appreciate open spaces but are happy in gardens from which they cannot fly and where they make much less noise than other ducks. Only the females quack. All drakes are limited to a hoarse whisper. Runners eat less in the way of grain and pellet supplement than big table ducks. Of course, they should be given calcium and protein-rich food, especially the ducks during the extensive laying season.

We shall post some pictures of our ducks when they arrive.
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