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Lame Ducks?Here is a question from one of our visitors: Hi Pam, I have a pond on my property that has a stream on each side. About 3 or 4 months ago my husband brought me home 4 ducks. A female Pekin, a female Mallard and 2 male Mallards. All are doing quite well. They are so healthy everyone asks me if I'm raising them for Thanksgiving. We had them for a few weeks and my husband saw how much I fell in love with them that he came home with 2 babies. One a Khaki Campbell the other a Dark Campbell, I think they were males because the male Mallards didn't like them and tried to drown them so we penned them off in their own little area. Dear Dawn, I have had a similar experience with my ducks. I raised Muscovies and at times the adolescent ducks (ones that weren't really babies anymore but still were getting adult feathers) would come up lame and either limp around or not walk at all. I didn't take them to the vet as we had sooo many that it wasn't possible. But, they would recover on their own. I did ask my vet about it and he seemed to think it had more to do with the fast growth they had and the inability of the joints to deal with the weight. The ducks took about a week to recover. One thing is that you can't feed ducks any food that has medication in it like many chicken foods do. I would keep my ducks away from the others in smallish boxes with lots of hay for bedding and food and water near by for them. I didn't let them walk around and kept them out of the weather and warm (used a brooding light about 3 feet above them). I made sure the dogs and cats couldn't bug them, too. As it happened in a few days they would be up and out of the boxes and walking fine on their own. This is just my own personal experience. I don't know the exact cause of if there is other treatment. I am not a vet. Hope this helps.
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