More ducklings day 8 (start of week 2)

The newest ducklings are now starting their second week. Other than the introduction of straw (which I did a couple of days ago), and reducing the temperature by 1° each day, the only other change due this week will be to add a ceramic dish of water for bonus drinking and stepping in, as a prelude to the paint tray pool. I’ll probably add that dish tomorrow.

Peeking at the ducklings in a nesting box, through the cupboard:

Ducklings

Some more duckling cuteness:

Ducklings

Ducklings

Ducklings

Ducklings

Ducklings

More ducklings day 9

Today I added a ceramic cat dish to the duck house, as a baby-sized pool from which they can enjoy drinking and wading. Next week I’ll upgrade that to the red paint tray pool, but this is a good start.

Ducklings can drown if allowed in too much water too soon, as they don’t have the waterproofing oils yet. (If they were raised by a mother duck, she would share her oils with them.) Wading in shallow water helps them develop and spread their own oils.

Hey what’s this?

Dish

Looks like it’d be fun to step into:

Ducklings with dish

Ducklings with dish

Yep:

Ducklings with dish

Ducklings with dish

My turn:

Ducklings with dish

Mine too:

Ducklings with dish

This is fun!

Ducklings with dish

More ducklings day 11

Today the ducklings figured out the feeder tube; hard to believe that they’re already big enough to reach it. Check out a couple of GIFs of them eating from the tube!

Here’s the first GIF, from the cam footage:

GIF of duckings eating from tube

A cam shot of that:

Two duckings eating from tube

It’s fun to step in the dish:

Ducklings

Watching me:

Ducklings

Eating from the tube:

Ducklings

Some more close-ups:

Ducklings

Ducklings

Ducklings

Another GIF of a ducking eating from the tube while I was there:

GIF of ducking eating from tube

More ducklings day 12

Today, several pictures of ducklings on top of the EcoGlow, and in the water dish. Oh, and we’re thinking about names for these ducklings; read on for details.

The newest ducklings are all female: one Khaki Campbell, a breed developed in England, so we want a “C” name suitable to that area, to join Clyde and Cora. Plus one Blue Swedish, so we want a Swedish “S” name to join Sven and Sonja. And four Rouens, which originated in France, so want four suitable “R” names, to join Rémy. We have some ideas, but I’d welcome other suggestions, if you have any.

Last night, I spotted one of the Rouens sitting on top of the EcoGlow heating panel:

Duckling on EcoGlow

They’re supposed to sit under it, but seem to enjoy the top more than underneath. This morning, a Rouen and the Khaki Campbell were both there:

Ducklings on EcoGlow

A duckling in the water dish — which is fine; it’s there as a bathing intro, to literally get their feet wet on the concept:

Duckling in dish

But it’s also available for drinking, at least until they splash all the water out:

Ducklings drinking

Watching me:

Ducklings

It’s fun to stand in the dish:

Duckling in dish

Again on the EcoGlow (and you can see her tongue):

Duckling on EcoGlow

Duckling on EcoGlow

Two:

Ducklings on EcoGlow

More ducklings day 13: pool and treats

Today I swapped out the waterer for the full-sized one, removed the duckling feeder, introduced them to the paint tray pool, and to leafy treats. An exciting day for ducklings!

With the previous ducklings, I introduced the pool and treats on day 15, so I’m a couple of days earlier than before, but they seemed ready. I also decided that since the pool is easy to get out of, I could leave it there full-time from the start, instead of only having supervised swims for the first week. I am keeping a close eye on them via the camera, though, just in case. And “swims” is an exaggeration; there’s only about an inch of water in the tray today, so all they can do is wade a little, like they could in the ceramic dish before today, so there is little risk of drowning.

Since they can all reach the feeder tube now, I decided it’d be a good time to remove the duckling feeder too. And as their bills continue to grow, it’s also about time to move them to the full-sized waterer, so they can immerse their full bill to clean it.

The first step was to remove the old waterer and feeder, and the bricks they were sitting on:

Removed waterer and feeder

Here are the removed ceramic dish, feeder, and waterer, plus the paint tray and ramp I’m about to add, and a kneeling pad so I don’t have to kneel in the muck:

Removed feeder, paint tray

I took the opportunity to muck out the dirty straw, and remove the shelf liners; the ducklings bravely watched from the back, not freaking out as much as the previous ones did:

Mucking out

The full-sized waterer, paint tray pool, wooden ramp, and fresh straw:

Full-sized waterer and paint tray pool

I then introduced them to leafy treats, which they checked out fairly quickly:

Leafy treats

It didn’t take them long to get excited about the treats; did you see the video?

Leafy treats

And they were quick to go into pool, too:

Into pool

Much more quick than the previous ducklings; I’ve noticed that female ducklings are really into being in water, more so than male ones.

Here are all of them except the Blue Swedish duckling:

Duckings in pool

Another angle:

Duckings

Preening and drinking; ducks have a gland near the base of their tail that secretes waterproofing oils, so this Rouen is probably rubbing on that to help spread it (I recently saw a fascinating YouTube video about duck waterproofing):

Preening and drinking

Preening and drinking

Drinking

More ducklings day 14

The ducklings are two weeks old today. They’ve grown a lot already, but still have several more weeks of growth ahead of them before they can join the ducks in the pond.

As mentioned yesterday, I introduced them to the paint tray pool a couple of days early, and left it in the duck house full-time, a change from previous ducklings, but I think safe enough.

They took advantage of that with some night wading:

Night wading

In the morning, I refreshed the water, then offered to hand-feed some lettuce. They were hesitant at first:

Treat?

But soon approached, and took turns grabbing it out of my hand:

Treat?

I then tossed in some more, and they enjoyed eating them from the tray:

Treats

Treats in the pool

Everyone in the pool (did you see the video?). They won’t be able to do this for long, as they continue to grow, but in two or three weeks time I’ll introduce them to the more spacious kiddie pool:

Everyone in the pool

An animated GIF of cute little flapping wings:

GIF of flapping wings

Flapping tiny wings:

Flapping wings

Flapping wings

Eating from the EcoGlow:

Eating

Fresh water for afternoon pool time:

In the pool