New House Guests

It was a cold morning and when I fed, I could hear weak peeping noises coming from a duck’s nest. The duck was nowhere to be found (perhaps motherhood didn’t live up to her expectations), and some little duckling bodies were lying huddled over the eggs in the cold. One of the eggs was peeping weakly. It, too, felt cold. I picked it up, and could hear more weak peeping from the nest. Another egg with a tiny hole chipped in it. I put them both in my pocket, and checked the other cold eggs. A tiny little duck bill protruded from one, not moving.

I brought the peeping eggs inside and tried warming them with a hair dryer which was not exactly temperature controlled. I didn’t want to take the chance of cooking them in the shell, so I peeled the shell and dried them. I briefly abandoned them to locate and unpack a Hova-Bator incubator that had been bought for the daughter’s poultry @ 10 years previously, but the box had never been opened. I brought it in from where it had been stored and assembled it, periodically warming the little ducklings with a hair dryer.

The incubator temperature controls works great after all that time!  Now the ducklings are in the incubator with the controls set @ 100 degrees. I’ll probably leave them in there the rest of the day before moving them to a box with a heat lamp so they can get their first meal.

Will they survive after being chilled nearly to death?  I don’t know, but they seem to be gaining strength.

2 Responses so far »

  1. 1

    Robert D said,

    January 29, 2008 @ 9:44 pm

    Our bathtubs have raised and saved quite a bunch of varied critters over the years. (gotta put em somewhere) It’s always nice to have two bathrooms.

  2. 2

    swampie said,

    January 30, 2008 @ 6:10 pm

    Well, now they’re in a home-made brooder under a heat lamp in the, er, kitchen. As soon as the temperature stabilizes outside, they will be moved out!

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