trystinn: (basset)
[personal profile] trystinn
Since I've been such a mope this week and haven't posted any great pictures I figure I owe you all a bonus. Here's a video taken this afternoon of Gracie putting the duck flock through their paces, circling around the trees and back towards the pen. As you can see, the new gals are still quite excitable when herded.



"Just in case anyone were curious, the Basic herding dog commands

* Come-bye - go to the left of the stock, or clockwise around them.
* Away or 'way - go to the right of the stock, or counterclockwise around them.
* Stand, wait, down or sit - stop.
* Steady or take time - slow down.
* Cast – gather the stock into a group. Good working dogs will cast over a large area.
* Find – search for stock. A good dog will hold the stock until the stockman arrives. Some will bark when the stock have been located.
* Hold – keep stock where they are.
* Bark, or speak up - bark at stock. Useful when more force is needed, and usually essential for working cattle and sheep.
* Look back - return for a missed animal.
* In there - go through a gap.
* Walk up - move in closer to the stock.
* That'll do - stop working and return to handler."

Date: 2009-09-25 11:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] tryst-inn.livejournal.com
Not really, ironically humanity has bread most domestic ducks so large that they are too heavy to fly. They can flutter a bit for only a few feet, about 3 feet high but it exhausts them. Once in awhile one of the ducks will flutter themselves in and out of the pen, but they vastly prefer to walk. So far none of them have used this limited flight ability to get themselves out of their pen in the morning. They are always there quacking to be let out in the morning.

There is a "Flying Mallard" domestic breed that supposedly can still fly like it's wild ancestor.

This breeding has also lose them any ability to brood well. They tend to lay their eggs pretty much anywhere (I imagine the gals say 'oops, did that come out of my tush?', then walk off slightly embarrassed). Brooding happens so rarely, most sources recommend you either use a broody chicken hen or an incubator.

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