Okay need ideas on how to make a simple duck house.
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- Barbara Good
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- Location: West Yorkshire, UK
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Okay need ideas on how to make a simple duck house.
Okay need ideas on how to make a simple duck house.
We have loads of good clean pallets, and roofing materials.
It needs to be a simple design and easy to make as it will be made by my 14 year old son.
We have loads of good clean pallets, and roofing materials.
It needs to be a simple design and easy to make as it will be made by my 14 year old son.
- hedgewizard
- A selfsufficientish Regular
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- Joined: Fri Feb 17, 2006 9:26 pm
- Location: dorset, UK
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- kazaddress
- Jerry - Bit higher than newbie
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- hedgewizard
- A selfsufficientish Regular
- Posts: 1415
- Joined: Fri Feb 17, 2006 9:26 pm
- Location: dorset, UK
- Contact:
Here's a couple of links.
http://www.newagrarian.com/homestead/ducks/house.html
http://www.henhouses.co.uk/
There are books and booklets you can buy for actual plans if you're that way inclined. The reason I ask about the water is that if you can have your entrance ramp over deepish water you don't need to close it up against Mr Fox every night. Mind you, if they're hungry enough they'll swim!
Ducks are very cheap to house. They need daytime shelter from sun by planting trees and shrubs in their run, but otherwise all they need is a dry well-ventilated house giving them 4 to 5 sq feet (0.5 sq metres) floor space each. Ducks don't need a window like hens do, and they don't perch so the house can be lower - say 4 feet high at the front and 3 feet at the back. The floor should be slatted to keep the litter dry, and raised a couple of inches off the base. For ventilation's sake leave the top foot of the front open - just cover it with strong wire mesh and protect it with a weatherboard. The whole of one side should hinge or come off the frame completely for ease of cleaning. There should be a sloping run-up board to the door because ducks are pretty clumsy.
Nestboxes can be just that - low boxes with some straw in. A square frame of board will do, or even just a cut-down cardboard box (or four bricks with their corners touching)! If your ducks are free-range face their house to the southern quadrant and give them a bit of an enclosed run. Egg-collecting is much easier if you can confine them until about 10am, after egg-laying time.
Ta to the late Katie Thear for info.
http://www.newagrarian.com/homestead/ducks/house.html
http://www.henhouses.co.uk/
There are books and booklets you can buy for actual plans if you're that way inclined. The reason I ask about the water is that if you can have your entrance ramp over deepish water you don't need to close it up against Mr Fox every night. Mind you, if they're hungry enough they'll swim!
Ducks are very cheap to house. They need daytime shelter from sun by planting trees and shrubs in their run, but otherwise all they need is a dry well-ventilated house giving them 4 to 5 sq feet (0.5 sq metres) floor space each. Ducks don't need a window like hens do, and they don't perch so the house can be lower - say 4 feet high at the front and 3 feet at the back. The floor should be slatted to keep the litter dry, and raised a couple of inches off the base. For ventilation's sake leave the top foot of the front open - just cover it with strong wire mesh and protect it with a weatherboard. The whole of one side should hinge or come off the frame completely for ease of cleaning. There should be a sloping run-up board to the door because ducks are pretty clumsy.
Nestboxes can be just that - low boxes with some straw in. A square frame of board will do, or even just a cut-down cardboard box (or four bricks with their corners touching)! If your ducks are free-range face their house to the southern quadrant and give them a bit of an enclosed run. Egg-collecting is much easier if you can confine them until about 10am, after egg-laying time.
Ta to the late Katie Thear for info.
- hedgewizard
- A selfsufficientish Regular
- Posts: 1415
- Joined: Fri Feb 17, 2006 9:26 pm
- Location: dorset, UK
- Contact:
- hedgewizard
- A selfsufficientish Regular
- Posts: 1415
- Joined: Fri Feb 17, 2006 9:26 pm
- Location: dorset, UK
- Contact: