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Raising DucksBasicsDuckling diaryManagementHousingEggsLinks/ResourcesMoviesand please note: |
Nighttime duck pen
Adapting available space. It ain't gorgeous, but it's secure. At night the ducks live under our deck, which is nearly a full story off ther ground and was already enclosed with chain link fence. (We think a former owner kept a dog under there.) ConstructionTo make the pen predator-proof, we topped the chain link with chicken
wire, stapling it to the underside of the deck and tying it with wire
every 6-12 inches to the chain link, and added a couple of 2x4s to fill
gaps next to the house and around the gate. This required some creative
construction as the original deck was not exactly what you'd call "square."
But there is no hole larger than the 2-inch holes in the fencing, so
nothing a fox or possum can fit through. (We do not have weasels 'round
these parts. If we did, lord, we'd have to buy a guard llama.) As a
final precaution we added a 2-foot strip of half-inch hardware cloth
around the bottom of the pen, including the gate itself, tying it to
the chain link with thin wire; we have heard of possums reaching through
chicken wire to grap poultry. The small shelter underneath the deck is a simple frame built from
2x4s, 4 feet square, 45 inches high in front and 51 inches high in back.
(45 and 51 inches, for you humanities majors, total 8 feet, the length
of a 2x4. I'm trying to conserve materials here.) The roof is plywood
with tin roofing nailed to it, sloping to the front, so the ducks can
get out of the rain if they want to. LightingJust to keep the ducks calm and to deter predators, we keep a 15-watt
light bulb burning all night in the pen. (We re-used the heat lamp reflector
as an outdoor light fixture.) BeddingWe use wheat straw for bedding. One bale provides a decent layer, a
few inches thick, and stays relatively clean for about two weeks. In
warm weather, we rake out the used bedding and replace it with fresh
straw every couple of weeks to keep the flies down. In the winter, though,
we just pile additional straw on top until it gets too thick for them
to climb into the pen easily. NestboxesI had intended to build nice wooden nestboxes before the ducks started laying, but they were a bit precocious, and I didn't get a chance. Instead, to save trouble, I bought two black plastic storage bins and set them on their sides with a layer of straw inside. I cut the lids into a U-shape to hold the straw in but let the ducks climb in and out easily, and duct-taped them onto the bins. (See the photo, below.) I am, for once, glad to have been lazy, because these boxes are much lighter and easier to clean than wooden boxes would be. PhotosClick any of the photos for a larger version. |
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