What more eggs ...... it can get out of control you know - and I should know
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Broooody!!!!! and Some french sounding chickens
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it will have to be the weekend as thats the only time I get up during daylight. I also have a male and female goose. I have a suspicion the female may be coming into lay the male has been a bit more standoffish recently normaly he backs down and walks away when I'm around. The last couple of days he has stood his ground. He doesn't attack he just wont move and hisses. I pressed the point with him last night as I was getting fed up and he did back down after I stroked him.Last edited by walldanzig; 18-02-2010, 07:47 AM.
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john seymour used to say the best way to deal with a hissing goose is to carry a dustbin lid and a walking stick. if he attacks at least you can cover your retreat with dignity!
what you going to do with the eggs? if they are fertile, hatch them as 4 week old goslings are worth around £12 around here. Thats the only way to make money from them mind you as they cost far too much to rear to table weight on a commercial basis!
you could sell the eggs as fertile. £2.50 each at the local market!
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You can merely protect yourself from a gander, but it is a stop-gap. Picking him up gets him thinking how much bigger you are, which helps if he is generally aggressive. If he is only aggressive when he has something needing protection, all you can do is avoid upsetting him any more than you have to, because he's doing what he is meant to do! The ganders I've had were never difficult with me, because I did make a practice of picking them up fairly often.
If he really comes at you and you are not 'armed', grab him by the head (hand around the back of the head, you don't want to strangle him) and lift him until his feet are off the ground, just for a few seconds. I've only had to do it twice, and neither gander tried again (one was newly acquired, the other was a specific situation with someone else's gander, and she told me about the technique!)Flowers come in too many colours to see the world in black-and-white.
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Its the time of year I think. My gander Sid normally trundles round after me like a dog, or plonks himself down about 6ft from where Im working and watches. He's never nasty and I can stroke him and hand feed him, but his missus is a bit more wary and just chats away at me from a bit futher off. At the moment though he's getting really stroppy and has had a go at me, even bitten me (hurts too) I use his big water dish to shove him away, or grab his neck and walk him away from 'his' patch.
I'll have try picking him up hernia here I come
Doesn't help that we built them a new shed which is just outside the chooks loosebox, so he's protecting the little yard (ex bull-pen). Think I'll get OH to help me shift it to somewhere with less passing traffic.
I would still have another pair though if I could, they are so clever, and such good guard dogs.
What sort are yours Wall?.. and they are selling VERY well on ebayAnyone who says nothing is impossible has never tried slamming a revolving door
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