Sunday, 12 August 2012

Cayugas and Cream Legbars


Sunday 12th August 2012
No mist or fog. Signals a change in the weather.

New arrivals
About a week ago I decided to give ducks a go, chiefly to become a major part of my anti-slug campaign. A bit of research revealed that what I needed were Cayugas - a glossy black duck which is quieter than others, docile and does not wander too far.

As luck would have it, I found a possible source fairly nearby, up at Frampton Fen.


Cream Legbars
Then a double dose of luck, for the same place also had two Cream Legbar chicks, both females.

Cream Legbar chicks are
autosexing. This means you can
tell males from females...
if you know what you're looking for.












I'd been struggling to find a local source for these and did not want to resort to eggs through the post again. After two goes at hatching these beautiful blue eggs, we produced a grand total of two cockerels (not entirely our fault as the second dozen eggs were infertile - I'm still waiting for them to be replaced). So the hope is that by next spring we will have  a breeding trio of Cream Legbars to give us blue eggs and our own source of Legbar chicks.

They weren't going cheap (sorry!) but hatching from eggs has in this case proved to be a false economy. Besides, blue eggs and legbar chicks in the future will soon repay the investment. To buy a trio (a cockerel and two hens) would cost in the region of £40 so we'll still save money, even after all our frustrations. And when we do eventually get those other replacement eggs we will have birds from three different sources which will ensure a better genetic mix.

The Cayugas
The ducks are more difficult to sex than the Legbars, but the experienced ear can tell the difference in their call once they reach a couple of months old. Andrew, the owner of the farm, caught four young birds for us and reckons we should have a drake and three ducks. And here they are, settling into their new home.
They took to their new surroundings like ducks to water!

They quickly muddied the water.
Ducks need access to water but, like the geese, there needs to be a very large pond which can sustain the mess they make or a small water container so that the water can be easily changed.

Females get some white in the plumage when they get older.
The white in these ducks' plumage probably displays some impurity.
However, I'm really not bothered by show standards,
as long as they eat slugs and quack contentedly.




Once they've settled in we'll move the Cayugas around the veg patches. Hopefully they will keep down the pests without causing too much destruction of their own. For now we'll leave them be to get used to their new home.











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