As a fun birthday activity yesterday, I spent the afternoon cleaning out the duck house and setting it up for ducklings, plus building a ramp for their swimming pool. Read on for more on that.
Firstly, a shot from the duck house camera of before cleaning it out:
Here’s the duck house with open doors, while I was cleaning it out (and a cameo of Bert on the island):
Empty duck house; I also removed the inner floor, a second floor layer that I made on the theory that it’d make it easier to clean out, by pulling it out like a drawer. But I never did that, since that’d freak out the ducklings, and stuff would fall down the back anyway, and it was easy enough to clean out without that:
Me sitting in the duck house, adding hooks to arrange wires:
I repaired and re-added the feeder tube, a new Brinsea EcoGlow brooder, a new heat lamp, duckling feeder, and shelf liner for grippy flooring (for the first couple of weeks):
The Brinsea EcoGlow is a heating plate on adjustable-height legs that ducklings can go under like a mother duck, giving them intimate warmth. I put it in one of the nesting boxes, to further that impression:
I also added a new ceramic heat lamp; unlike previous ones I’ve used, this doesn’t emit any light, and should last much longer, while using less power:
I added the temporary barriers to close the vents above the maintenance door, to help retain more warmth:
Next, I went to the workshop and made a ramp to make it easier for the ducklings to get into the paint tray I use as a swimming pool. Here are some routed sides for the ramp:
And some rough routing of traction grooves:
The completed ramp, next to the tray:
Underside of the ramp; it hooks onto the handle of the tray:
Ramp:
The ramp and tray in the duck house. I will remove it before adding the ducklings, as they won’t be ready to use it until about the third week, and only for brief supervised swims initially, but good to have it ready now:
The duck house is now almost ready for the new ducklings, arriving in just over a week. The last steps are to fill the food and water dispensers, remove the tray and ramp, and turn the heat back on (I tested them for a few hours today):
I also changed the LED light strip to red, as seen in this cam shot; red is a more soothing color for ducklings (and chicks):
Stay tuned for lots of pictures of ducklings in just over a week!