Duck brooder
The crib, also known as Kathy's study. (More photos
are available below.)
We brooded the ducklings in Kathy's study,
in a baby pool about 4 feet across. At four days old they were jumping
up and getting their heads above the top of the pool, so we cut up a cardboard
box and duct-taped it into a fence.
For warmth we used a heat lamp with a 175-watt
red bulb (roughly $5 each for lamp and bulb by mail-order from FarmTek),
attached to a photographer's tripod so we could raise it gradually to
control the heat. The books say that ducklings need to be kept at 85 to
90 degrees for the first week; the temperature can be lowered 5 degrees
a week after that. We checked the temperature in the brooder before the
ducks arrived to set the initial height of the lamp, but after that, we
just watched the ducks: when they seemed to want to be away from the lamp,
we raised it a bit. Had we seen them huddling under the lamp, we would
have lowered it.
For bedding we used corncob litter (sold
for rabbits) topped with a layer of burlap, because otherwise the ducks
will try to eat the bits of corncob. We started out changing the burlap
daily and the corncob litter every 3 to 4 days; by the third week we were
changing the corncob litter every other day. Longer, and it got stinky.
All of the used litter and burlap went into the compost, of course. After
three weeks we ran out of burlap and switched to straw bedding, a one-inch
layer that we changed daily.
The chick feeder and chick waterer are standard
fare from a feed & grain or farm supply store; each screws onto a
quart Mason jar. After about a week and a half we had to add a second
waterer because they went through a whole quart overnight. Ducklings make
an awful mess of their water, and much of it was ending up in the bedding,
so we set the waterers in aluminum foil cake pans. (This was Kathy's idea.
Gotta give credit.)
At three and a half weeks old, Patsy (who was always a bit precocious)
jumped the cardboard barrier and ran around on the carpet peeping. That
was the end of the brooding; the next night we moved them outside.
June in North Carolina is plenty warm for ducks at that age.
A note about materials: the baby pool we obtained in a trade; the cardboard
was salvaged; and the tripod was borrowed. All we had to buy (apart from
the bedding, which was composted and will end up in next year's garden)
was the lamp and the feeder and waterers, which totaled under $20; and
the lamp will find other uses. Since we're not going to be brooding ducklings
or chicks on a regular basisat least not anytime soonthere
was no point in spending a lot of money on the setup.
Photos
Click any of the photos for a larger version.
|