Dziękuję bardzo za Twoje cudowne komentarze - dopiero co je znalazłem - więc przepraszam za spóźnienie się z podziękowaniem za nie! Przesyłając najlepsze życzenia i „Szczęśliwego Nowego Roku” z Normandii, Sue
Ha ha! Actually as they live in a forest garden and hopefully have a 'natural' as possible life, several of my hens are monogamous and have formed strong and lasting bonds with roosters. One of them is Millefeuilles, who was the other broody hen I tried out with the duck eggs at the start of the film, so you are right, if she had decided to hatch them her long-term mate Spike might have had something to say about it! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Lol...that's so funny! I just imagined that rooster thinking... hmm maybe we should reconsider hatching more chicks sweetie! Lol. It's fascinating what you were saying about the jungle fowl! I'm definitely going to check out your other videos and look forward to seeing & hearing more about your forest garden! It looks delightful, by the way!
The reason you don't pull the egg shell off of them is because there are little veins on the shell that are absorbed by the chick and to pull it off prematurely would make the chick bleed out and possibly die.
Exactly, which is why I go very slowly and carefully. Once there is a hole in the shell, made by the chick it can breathe so it is only a matter of the babies being exhausted, you just have to be patient whilst they take a rest between efforts and wait for them to do most of the work. The other thing I found with the ducklings, was that in trying to break out they actually became very thirsty, often drinking the water drops off my fingers, whilst I was damping down the shell membrane. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
There is always that one chick that struggles getting out. But I actually pull the egg shell off in that case. It's too risky to just let it be because it may happen that the egg rolls on the side where the hole is while the chick is struggling to get out. I don't have the patience to keep watch over the egg until the chick manages to get out by itself. Oh and yeah....the chicks that I helped out were perfectly fine and in good health afterwards. I only pull the egg shell off if there is already a hole of course. Otherwise you get undeveloped and disabled chicks and you don't want that.
That is the sign of a super good mother hen, who knows she is on a mission to hatch. I was amazed because the duck eggs were so different to the smaller bantam eggs my hens lay but our hens, particularly the Cochins, have such a strong mother instinct and they so love having chicks that they are prepared to sit on anything that looks like an egg. I once found a chicken in our vegetable plot sitting on a potato! All the very best and so sorry I only just found your comment! Sue
Thanks Dan for your kind comments and you are most welcome. They actually are very friendly, I find it helps too if there is ever an emergency, they will trust you - unlike our neighbours' mother ducks - I still have the scars... just joking and all the very best, Sue
Hi there and thanks for your lovely comments, they are appreciated. Me too! There are some wonderful ways in which we can learn so much from her. I also never cease to be amazed at what hens can do - I'm about to edit a film 'Co-parenting' but you might be interested in this article which I never made into a film: holistic-hen.blogspot.com/2015/11/chicks-in-cold-weather-finding-some.html#.W4AcUxqYOkB it shows the amazing intuitive kindness of mother hens. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
goatgirl61 Thanks for your kind comments!! I just felt so sorry for that duckling but was so happy he had been able to make that initial hole and could keep telling me he was OK! The shell coming off was a real problem because I knew he need to be kept dampened down but didn't want him to get cold. One time before my neighbour's duck deserted leaving just two unhatched eggs in the nest and we hatched them in the oven because we had no broody. Luckily we'd had the woodstove lit for breakfast and it was just at a nice 'mother duck' temperature! All the very best, Sue
that happened with my grandma but instead of the mothers deserting she died and a hen was ready to hatch but her nest was destroyed by a pair of roosters fighting for dominance so she put the duck eggs with her. the funny part was that the hen would go beserk when the ducklings would go into the shallow pond
+CommiGamer861 Hi there, That is most interesting. On certain occasions, they are rare but the male will take over the nest if the female dies, it can even happen with chickens if the hen has formed a couple with a specific rooster, as ours often do. I know a friend of ours who hatched ducks with a hen had exactly the same attitude when the ducklings went in the water, she would run up and down the bank crying for them to come back in. Luckily your grandma was organised to save the ducklings, you can not always be sure a hen will take to other chicks, I usually like to plan which hen to have as a mother, in this case it was a last minute thing. In fact I had several broodies available, luckily but Pearl was the star. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
@@Pavlovafowl I know this is super old- but my grandparents own a rooster who's a bit of a nanny hen himself. One clutch of chicks was orphaned after the hen was taken by a coyote, and the other two the hens were simply tired of looking after the much older chicks so they gave them the boot. This rooter took all 3 clutches under his wing (literally) and raised them up. He didn't lose a single chick and was quite the protective papa. The coyote problem at their farm has gotten way worse- to the point that they're down to 3 hens and 4 roosters from a flock of nearly sixty but the nanny rooster is still kickin.
@@dormiaria8780 Hi there, this comment thread may be old but it is still read! Your grandparents experience is quite rare although I have heard of it before, mostly though it is when a bonded pair of birds, so a rooster and hen that are actually bring the chicks up together, (this in itself is rare) and the hen dies. I've even heard of one occasion when a hen was sitting eggs and was taken by a predator and the rooster then sat and hatched the eggs. In my experience of keeping hens and roosters in a forest garden, they do pair off, as did/do their wild relatives the Junglefowl. I have a film here which shows one of my Polish roosters and the father of a chick keeping the chick warm at night: ruclips.net/video/0YYVTXx_qlc/видео.html (at 0.41). My contention is that the way in which the majority of humans bring up poultry creates problems for them because within the birds' nature and heritage there is the provision for both parents to take care of the chicks. Your grandparents must have the trust and well being of their poultry very much at heart because this rooster was allowed to express his natural instincts and care of the abandoned chicks. If this happens again you should try and film it or at least write it up because it is an all too rare experience and it makes people think that maybe preconceptions about roosters being aggressive or profligate about chicks and hens are more of our own making, which is so important! Re predators: my sister has a similar problem (lynx, wild cats, mink and foxes) on the moors in Scotland but she recently got a flock dog, which is specially trained to guard free-ranging chickens. He actually turned up at an animal shelter as the owners of the farm where he was raised had died - he is a lovely creature, a Blue Merle Collie but there are other breeds that are either inherent flock dogs or can be specially trained - you might want to pass this on to your grandparents. All the best from France and thank you so much for your input - it is of great interest to me and I'm sure others who read the comments! Sue
@@Pavlovafowl I should talk to them, but the problem is their guard dog now likes to eat chickens. he's great with all other animals and children, but just poultry rings the dinner bell in Bear's head (their German Shepherd's name) so he can't be a flock guardian. I didn't know it was that rare since they've always had some kind of Nanny bird around :) I wish I had my old cell phone because I had pictures of him surrounded by part of his brood there.
my grandmother used to do that quite often,,,,put duck eggs under a setting hen....Hens and ducks treat babies differently so it wont work nearly as well putting hen eggs under a duck.....reason being,,,,,hens lead their young around in open ground and scratch for insects for them to eat. You will see the old hen do some scratching,,then step back so the chicks can then step up to find the bugs in the loose dirt. ,,,A duck wont do this,,,,a duck simply wanders around and lets the young duck simply do as best he can,,,,she wont scratch for them,,,and wont pick up a bug at all, unless she eats it herself. When the eggs hatch out,,,the little ducks think the hen is their mom and will all come running from danger when she calls. And even after they are pretty large, they will try to all get under her wings for protection, but there is just not enough room. They will bunch together and lift her completely off the ground in their rush...Their heads and necks dont have enough room so they peep through her wings and feathers to the outside...The fun starts with the hen though,,,if she walks past a pool of water,,,,the little ducks she has raised will all rush to the water for a swim,,and she gets all noisy and upset, thinking they are all gonna drown!!! HAHA!! And if its flowing water,,,they will all have fun and float along downstream with her fussing all the way trying to call them out!! HA!! They wont come out, until they have had enough. When they do get back with her,,,she will fuss at them while leading them all the way home
Hi there, that was a lovely comment and a great description of the ducklings' life with a hen. Our friend had a mother hen who used to run up and down the riverbank calling her ducklings to come out of the water. It is the one thing that makes them mad, having disobedient 'chicks' and of course you are right, she is worried they will drown. I hope you will follow in your grandmother's footsteps and raise poultry too! I have a photograph of my great grandmother with her hen and baby chicks, so I think it is in the blood. All the very best from Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
Thank you for that, it is a lovely observation. I absolutely hate it when I lose a bird for whatever reason. One of the saddest sights in bird keeping is an egg that has a chick but doesn't hatch, it is so sad. All the very best from Normandie, love Sue xx
I did not realize that you can't peel the shell off! I was thinking I would love to help that little guy out soon much by just pulling the shell off for him, then I read that is NOT a good thing to do! Thanks, a very interesting video!
Thank-you for your comments, they are appreciated! Absolutely, you have to be so careful because of the blood supply vessels, which you always see vestiges of when the chick has finally emerged and how close they are to the outer shell! Once many years ago, I saw our biology teacher do just that and the chick bled to death in front of our eyes, something you don't forget. As the duckling has already made a hole in the shell it is using its lungs and can already breathe, so there is no need to hurry anything. I prefer to let the duckling do things at its own pace even to the point of kicking of the final piece of shell, only that way am I certain everything has sealed off and there is no risk. All the very best from sunny Normandie, Sue
Beautiful video! Quick thinking on your part!! When I was a child, my favorite book was called "Chirkendoose". It was a delightful story about a little fowl, hatched from an unidentified egg then loved and nurtured by all the fowl in the barnyard! Everyone claimed the little fowl as their own! I'm 72 Years old and still remember the story clearly because it did, indeed, leave me with a lasting impression. Your video brought fond memories back to me. Thank-you.
Hi there and thank you for those lovely comments! I looked up your book and read a synopsis of the story - I will find it on line and do it full justice and read the whole text. Thank you for making me aware of this gem! I had another great comment recently from someone who was given a gosling, a duck and a turkey as pets and as they all grew up together they obviously thought they were all one and the same, an interesting hybrid rather like your storybook bird!. To this end when the duck and goose went in the water, so did the turkey poult...and I never knew this, even though we had turkeys on our farm...turkeys can swim really well! I'm so happy my video brought back fond memories for you and hope you enjoy more of my films as I produce them. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
745 dislike why ?🤔😶 she did the right thing, helped baby , i enjoyed it everything was positive and dislikes ( must be cruel people ). Thank you for the lovely video.
Hi there, in a really funny and ironic way it is a mark of the success of a video when it gets so many dislikes, Once a video hits a certain number of views, it will always attract the attention of those who love to press the dislike button, unfortunately along with that you can also get some really unpleasant comments too but you can ban those people. I just feel so sorry for the children on RUclips who must be so happy to have created a really successful video, usually of their favourite fluffy, lovable, pet and then are subject to the barrage of 'dislikers' I think that is really hard. Our society sadly engenders people with a propensity to dislike and frankly hurt others but then it also has great people like yourself who so make up for it! Thanks for your kind words, they are appreciated and very best wishes from Normandie, Sue
When my ex and I first kept ducks, the weeks old ducklings we adopted had been hatched by a mamma hen. They did absolutely fine. As novice keepers we read up and learned our Khaki Campbells loved water (not all ducks are as fussed about water), so we got them a kiddie paddling pool. They eyed it with suspicion for a few hours before curiousity got the better of them. Crazy head bobbing into the pool, lots of flapping about and as soon as the first one got in the fun began! They all piled in and it was like a duck carousel. Occasionally one would do a maddie and swim under the others, they'd all jump out and run around the garden quacking like the devil was after them! A few burst paddling pools later (they have very sharp claws) we got a large, circular, heavy duty horse trough and half-sunk it into the ground. The emptying and refilling of the trough with a hose on a semi-sprinkler setting was a source of great excitement and generally cue for an orgy. Ducks are comical to watch. They are hardy birds, more resistant to disease than most other domestic fowl and their eggs are exceptional. Because of where we lived we deliberately didn't train them to come to hand, so catching them was another source of riotous laughter. I don't miss my ex, but I really miss our ducks.
Hi Irene, that is such a wonderful story, I really enjoyed it and your closing remarks are priceless! One of our reasons for moving is to have ducks and water - I've been looking into 'duckponics', have you come across this? It is an enclosed, cleaning system for duck ponds, where you run the water through a gravel type filter garden bed, much the same as a grey water system for a house. The ducks also get to eat the vegetation and the water, once filtered, is fed back into the pond. It sounds pretty good! I love Khaki Campbells and Indian Runners but there are so many others too I would love to raise. Hope you get some more soon and all the very best from sunny Normandie, Sue
@@Pavlovafowl Can't say I've heard of that Sue, but now you've told me I would defo look into it when I keep ducks again (this will happen!). Anything that helps keep things clean is a bonus because there is ongoing work involved. In my experience any especially water-loving ducks given access to water will turn lush area of lawn into mud, and they will dabble and dance in it and sometimes lay their eggs in awkward places. Ours were penned in about 200 sq ft overnight, with an additional 400 sq ft to roam during the day: within their pen they destroyed ALL vegetation. Fwiw, within their pen they were all quite happy nesting in a large second-hand dog kennel that we got on Gumtree for £40 :-)
Can't pip without Mummy's warmth and the usual heavy moisture from a Mother duck, Pearl can provide the warmth but there is no way I want to get her that wet. Mother ducks usually swim just before hatch and I've seen them dripping wet on the nest, so a piece of tissue works fine. This is not an ideal situation but my intent is to save these ducklings in the best way I can without too much stress to my hen or them. If you take away anything from this video it should be that when humans intervene, i.e. put two nesting ducks so close to each other that they get confused as to which mother has hatched what - then expect a disaster and try to get out of it as well as you can - it's not the ducks' fault! All the very best, Sue
Hi Laurina the more good caring people in the World the better it will become. Thank you for your lovely comments, they are appreciated. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Aaww , that is such a lovely comment! You absolutely made my day! Yes we are all fine and enjoying life in the forest garden! All the very best to you from Normandie, Sue xx
Hi Chrys, Ducks do make good mothers, it is just these two mother ducks got so confused because they were both in the same coop and both due to hatch their eggs on the same day. This is not a thing ducks do normally, they really seem to like their own space. I am amazed the two mothers got on so well and accepted all the ducklings after we took them back! However you are right Pearl the Cochin is a fantastic mother. Thanks for your lovely comments, they are appreciated and all the best from rainy Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
Pavlovafowl - Organic Forest Garden Poultry Thank you so much for your lovely and very informative reply. You are doing such a great job and even though it is demanding, it must be very rewarding to work in the nature.
Hi Julian, You are so right! I've made a film on mother and hen language, here is the link if you are interested: ruclips.net/video/Svrw3b_0p1Q/видео.html The sounds a hen makes to calm down chicks when they are scared is, I believe one of the most beautiful and expressive sounds ever! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
This could be a movie "Two hens from rival hen houses...." Great video, you are very knowledgeable and caring. I love my chickens and a duck has recently adopted us and sits in the garden all day. We have put out duck food and a large tray which she paddles in. She is quite a sassy lady.
Hi there, that is such a lovely comment, we really appreciate it! Good Luck with your baby ducks and hope you will film them! I subbed your channel, so I'll get notification! All the very best from Normandie, Sue and Andy
Hi Eva and thank you for your lovely comment and also for the advice. It is always best to add eggs or chicks of whatever kind in the dark. Pearl however is pretty much a perfect broody hen, she will accept everything. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Aaww thank-you for that lovely comment, it is appreciated. Birds are such wonderful creatures, helping them in any way is a privilege. All the very best from sunny Normandie, Sue xx
Oh Sue, you are a true midwife, assisting life to happen!!! That was so cute and touching!!! Mille-feuilles what a lovely name for that hen :D Gros bisous de la belle province qui lentement se réchauffe xox
***** Awww Christiane, Thanks! It was a great experience. That hen is so pretty - I had to think up a special name for her colouring, she is almost a Pékin/Cochin - just the tail is not quite fluffy enough! Gros bisous de la baie de Mont Saint Michel - 27 deg aujourd'hui et les hirondelles sont déjà arrivées!!! Sue et Andy xxx
Welcome Frieda and thank you for your lovely comment! My grandfather emigrated to New Zealand in a cattle boat before the first World War. He did eventually return but he never stopped telling us about how much he loved his time out there. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
this is so touching , heartwarming , nice and clever ... Well think about people adopting us , a chicken that adopts perfectly knows the same as those people yet she feels the same love as if it are hers , which are in fact hers now , love it !!!
Hi Sue ! It has been a true delite watching this , really ! When I didn't own any chickens I always had the idea many people still have today ( unfurtunately ) , yet that has changed . My image from a chicken back in time was simply that they didn't move much and ran away , so interest in a chicken as pets in my backyard ? no , I did not even see the sweethearts ! just like any other human being that doesn't know how a chicken CAN be in fact , my image since I got my very first one ? I bought two Rhode Island Red hens , youngsters from about 6 months during wintertime so they were close to laying eggs , yet had to wait because they keep a winterstop , one of them suddenly started screaming and I was like uhm ? what is going on with that one ? and oowww that one is really soooooooooooo sweet towards me , she looks as if she wants to cuddle haha ,what a silly idea I get from her ... Now guess what that adorable chicken did ? she laid her head down on my shoulder when I was cleaning out the feeding dishes :D , so the other one ? screaming one ? she had laid her very first egg :-)) , ever since that day ? my image of a chicken : individuals like human beings with a very strong memory ( stronger than humans !!! ) and they are either truely cuddle birds or they do not want you to lift them up and are more on their own , they are smart and they can experience LOVE , in their way but they do ! same applies for ducks ! I so wished I could have a couple of ducks here but my BC is too small and in Belgium it is not really approved to have the wild ducks ( protected animals ) , all the love in the world to you and your birds Sue ! sweet regards out of Belgium !!! Xoxo !
Hi there ! You must have got a lovely view out there ! :D I'm owning at this point the Old English Games but these are very much ' wild birds ' , they are living in trees :) and they lay bio eggs haha because they simply know what to do , if you feed them , fine , if you don't even better because they like to find their own stuff and they are exellent in it ! A lot of people only want the birds to get some small breeds with their breeds but if it is for that only I have to decline because they are more than meatbirds and I'm having the suspicion they are close to extinction too !!! put them for sale and nobody knows what breed you're talking about :( , but they are lovely , we are havin one hen that just is so desperate to get chicks ! she sits on every pile of eggs she can find in the woods ! only two chicks have been born but question is how come they died ... Now in my backyard I use to keep all kinds of breeds and all of them showed so much of personality ! they are all stolen ! just to think in your mind " who does such things and wherefor ? " even my adorable rooster got stolen but now I am waiting untill neighbours let me know their chickens are safe and the thief has not returned and after that I 'm buying myself these : Rhode Island Red , adorable adorable fluffy buts called Marans and some precious nice cuddly buff orpingtons :-) , that also includes the roosters because in their character they were so adorable , my rooster from the Marans cuddled all the time ! the roosters always get treated so differently but not in here ! they are equal ! and I swear you get much of love back from them if treated like that , my roo definitely deserved hughs and his girls ! Nice to read you have liked it in Belgium ! So Sue , I'm keeping up with you anyway , and uhm keep posting this adorable stuff ! :)) lots of love out of Belgium from me and my girl , my lovely husband and our lonely hen " Auberry '' :)
Oh how true! The problem is once you've had one hatch of chicks/ducks/quail you just have to repeat the experience each year - or Spring isn't Spring! Well that's my excuse anyway! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Hi there Dan, Thanks and yes the hens are so good at doing this, they instinctively are very caring. You might be interested in this little Cochin who looked after some chicks that were in a big hatch and were being left behind in the garden: holistic-hen.blogspot.fr/2015/11/chicks-in-cold-weather-finding-some.html#.WwwGGRqYOkB She worked out a strategy to help them all on her own! All the very best, Sue
Oh oh... moms both want the hatchlings to be theres... now what ?? Will see !!! Thats so nice ur helping, and softening the membrane THAT baby duck is stuck in.
Hi Brenda thanks so much for your comments, they are appreciated. A good hen will hatch anything, they are amazing mothers - you might like to read this story about Pearl's sister - I never made it into a film but it reveals a lot about chickens as parents: holistic-hen.blogspot.com/2015/11/chicks-in-cold-weather-finding-some.html#.XOf1ex0v6V5 All the very best from Normandie, Sue
What a sweet lady you are and what lovely chickens and ducks you have! I suppose your beautiful hen was wondering how she ended up with such odd looking chicks!! Lol Fabulous video & well done to all of you!
Hi Sarah and thank you so much for those lovely comments - I do appreciate them! It never ceases to amaze me how easily hens accept others types of chicks. I've raised quail with them for years and they instinctively seem to know how they need to be so careful with them and much faster and up to speed than with them than hen chicks. What really startled me with Pearl that at one point her voice even became duck-like! I always think we can learn so much from the birds! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
@@Pavlovafowl That's an amazing observation! I agree very much. I have a couple of chicks that I hatched in the incubator & they haven't been around other chickens yet. I noticed that they mimic the songs of the wild birds they hear every morning outside the window! They sound more like baby Robin's than baby chickens!
Thank-you so much for your lovely comments and well done you for your duck rescue too! I would really like to have ducks of my own and hope we will be able to move to place with more land and finally get some this year! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Another great video Sue, many thanks. What a cutie pie - great job in hatch him/her out !Hoping to hatch 5 ducklings for the first time in an incubator ... have a very broody black rock hen but I understand the ducklings would very probably imprint on her and she belongs to a small flock that is separate so not comfy in letting her brood them, which is a shame. Great job as always. Loving your broody mothers ☺
Aaww thanks! I really appreciate you taking time to comment. In future and starting from next week, I will be putting out a new video every Thursday. I already uploaded one for this week. All the very best from Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
Just to let you know I was not able to get a video out today as Andy has injured his back and I am doing all the work. Hopefully though there will be another video before the week end. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Hi there and thanks so much for your comments, I appreciate them. I have a mix of all kinds of old rare breeds of chickens and over many years they have created these interesting colours and patterns. I love it when we have new chicks hatching, as it is always a mystery to see how they will turn out and it can sometimes take over a year for the whole final colour and patterns to emerge, particularly with the Frizzles. All the very best from sunny Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
Hi Tracy, I know, I too love seeing birds hatch out - it isn't Spring without that! All the very best from Normandie and thanks for your comment, it is appreciated, Sue
Thank you so much for saving the lives of those little chicks ! =) you guys are awesome !!!! I was looking forward to your next update, and I am always positively shocked on how great you are! thank you again...
bassethoundmarco Awww Thanks!!! It is so kind of you to write that. It was a great experience, I love seeing chicks hatch and it was so easy with such great hens. I actually had four broody hens at the start, as there were just so many large eggs for such little hens but two of the hens just went crazy when they saw the duck eggs and there was no way they would sit them. Pearl ended up with so many but I made the nest very deep in the hay and she managed to cover them all. It was her first ever hatch, as she is only a year old but she is a star and such a natural mother. All the very best, Sue
Pavlovafowl it's funny you say that because a very similar experience happened to me when i lived in my casale maremmano (country house) in tuscany, Italy... I was about to go on a long trip to America during summertime (about a month...), and exactly the week before our departure I found out that one of my ducks was broody, and she was laying on 12 eggs! so before i ever went on any trip i used to bring my farm animals to our neighbours, and when i moved the nest with the broody duck, she decided to just abandon all of those eggs, so my dear neighbour distributed those eggs to 2 broody turkeys, and by the time i was back from the trip i had 12 beautiful white ducklings ! ahah I love animals so much... I hope one day I'll be living in such a beautiful place like where you live! cheers
bassethoundmarco What a great story, thanks for sharing! That was really inspired to get turkeys to sit the duck eggs - it would have made a great film! It's just so lucky we have so many broody hens - I've got 12 at the moment! I've found with hens that moving them when sitting usually goes fine but it can take 24 hours for a hen to remember you've moved the nest. However, ducks are quite different, in particular these of our neighbours, they are not tame, in fact although they are 'domesticated' they are in fact really still wild ducks. Tuscany is a beautiful area too, I hope some day you will get another country place. We lived in cities for some of our life and would never go back! All the very best, Sue
Pavlovafowl thank you so much =) and I definitely will return to the country as soon as possible,.. but at the moment I am only 17 years old, so unfortunately I have to go to university... however, as soon as I am done with it, I will start planning to find a beautiful meadow, such as yours, where I can build my house and happily raise a farm and my future family =) cheers!
Thank you John for expressing that, it is one of my favourites too. I am so looking forward to getting my own ducks some day, hopefully with the next twelve months but in the meantime I re-watch it too! All the very best from Normandie, Sue xx
Didn't know how to get a N.B duck or chick out of they're own egg carefully with a damp paper towels. Good to know thanks for sharing. Cutie little ones.
When the membrane goes like leather there is no blood in those little veins and its safe to carefully help the baby out. Exactly the same thing happened to me last week, they pipped and got shrink wraped, i peeled all 12 eggs very quickly and helped them out, now there all running around very healthy.
Hi there and thank you for your input, it is much appreciated. I just always err on the side of extreme caution in these cases. As I mentioned to others, as a child I witnessed a teacher try to help out a chick by pulling at the membrane of an egg and the chick bled to death in front of us - that sort of thing one never forgets. Plus in this case there was already a hole in the egg, the duckling was breathing well and I just took it slowly and let him do the work at his own pace. He was also very much stuck to the membrane, so I didn't want him tearing any skin or pulling out any feathers, so I knew that at his own pace he would feel if he was doing that and stop until he was dampened down enough for the membrane to peel off freely. All the very best and congratulations on saving your babies - shrink-wrapped is a great description!!! Sue
Hi Paul, this is quite normal. Any time you produce a video that gets 'popular' your film becomes a magnet for the 'dislikes'. What is worse is, that you start to get what sometimes can be some pretty obnoxious comments. I used to reply to these but realised it was a waste of time, now I just block the users and delete the comments. One of our other sites 'Organikmechanic' on RUclips has a video with over 5 million views we had to hold the comments for review on that once it reached a few hundred thousand views. I think it is just a phenomenon you either live with or leave RUclips and as the ad revenue has really shrunk over the past years - I'm guessing the more it goes on and the worse it gets, people will leave. RUclips is a way a lot of self-sufficient home-based people share what they do and as a consequence, make a bit of cash but there is a limit to how much you can put up with. I see no reason for a dislike button - if you don't press the 'like' you either don't think it worthy, can't be bothered or don't like it - for me that's enough. Thanks for your concern, it is positive support like yours that keeps us going and in general I have to say that we are very lucky to have some great followers on RUclips, All the very best, Sue
The world is full of bully and that's the problem, I guess it's a fashion now for adult to behave like cruel teenagers. Now in those days is hard to deal with people and not to argue. Very wonderful vid I feel sad why people give dislikes , to something so lovely.
I did dislike it. The reason? You're not allowing that animal to struggle to come out the way it should be. Any struggle makes it stronger. This seems unnatural.
@@Pavlovafowl It is the problem with the internet overall. Too much temptation to a certain immature or disturbed mind. More or less anonymous forum with lots of people watching. What could go wrong?
I had a duck that layed 2 eggs out in the open, not even a nest, and it started to rain. I put the 2 eggs under a broody hen. She hatched them out and raised them as her own. Later as the baby ducks grew up they would still acknowledge their mother chicken by bowing to her in thanks for raising them.
That is a lovely story and thank you so much for sharing it. We can learn so much from birds about love and care, sadly something we humans are often not that great at expressing or acknowledging thanks for. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
You truly have a lot of patience. I most likely would have done the wrong thing and pulled the duckling out too soon because it was struggling so much.
Hi Sam - because it's a feel-good video and this World needs a more fluffy element to it! Seriously though thanks for watching and for your great comment. All the very best Sue
Hi there and I totally agree! They are bantam Cochin aka Pekin. They are amazing birds and the story of how they got to the West from ancient China, where only the emperor was allowed to raise them is fascinating. If you are interested I wrote it up here: holistic-hen.blogspot.com/2018/02/the-cochin-craze-story-of-addiction.html#.X4HLYHcv6V5 and the film is here: ruclips.net/video/OgoP6id53LI/видео.html All the very best from Normandie and hope you get some Cochins of your own! Sue
Thank you Christine! I am the World's worst with zippers, I inherited the trait from my father and sleeping bags are a big nightmare for me so I could really empathise with this little duckling! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
1 neighbor leaves nonchalantly 2 parents forsake the babies 3 human comes to the rescue 4 hens supplied incubation services 5 person records the scenes 6 human narrates and participates in the caring of the babies 7 person edits clip 8 RUclips approves clip and starts promoting it 9 random person has time to watch stuff and he/she watches clip 10 random folks start mkn comments regarding clip 11 the end..
12 someone reads your comment, gives you a thumbs up and a red heart,writes: 'Thanks for your great comments, they are very much appreciated and moreover most original. All the very best from Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue' 13 the end
+mrbluenun Thanks for your comments, much appreciated: there are two other films about this hatch the second one is: ruclips.net/video/K8DCYhDnC9s/видео.html and there are also written posts as well here: holistic-hen.blogspot.fr/2015/04/duckling-disaster-what-to-do-when-your.html#.VTz8ueSlilM Thanks also for reminding me that I have been very remiss in not linking these films together, which I will put right some time today. All the very best Pavlovafowl aka Sue
brianzpartner Hi there, Thanks for your lovely comment, I am so happy you find these videos useful. It's good fun making them but when people take time to respond to them - that's the icing on the cake! All the best from us both, Sue and Andy
Very cute video! You handled the egg so delicately. The duck seems quite fond of your hand now lol The hens seem a bit distrusting. Is that because they're egg laying hens? If so, when their eggs are stolen it breaks trust and pressures them to lay more since they prefer a full clutch. Sometimes they'll eat infertile eggs to restore some of their lost nutrients since laying is such a strenuous process. Regardless, eggs are better off as compost than in your body: “Eggs have so much cholesterol, we can’t say they “contribute nutritionally.” … By law, according to the USDA, the egg industry “needs to steer clear of words like ‘healthy’ or ‘nutritious.’" --- Why is it okay to exploit animals when they suffer like us? Unless you like abusing animals, why wouldn't you choose plants over body parts? watch Cowspiracy, What the Health, & Dominion 2018 Peace, love, Veganism ✌
Piekna rodzina kaczoszkow super he piekny filmik
Dziękuję bardzo za Twoje cudowne komentarze - dopiero co je znalazłem - więc przepraszam za spóźnienie się z podziękowaniem za nie! Przesyłając najlepsze życzenia i „Szczęśliwego Nowego Roku” z Normandii, Sue
That peeping sound stirs my maternal instincts. There is nothing cuter than a baby chick or duckling.
My dogs like the cheaping sound too!
@@boutchie06 So do my cats, but not in a good way!
@Nathaniel Smith ~ Awww, cute!
Yes there is actually. Baby Cheetahs. They also chirp by the way. Look it up you'll love it.
LMFAO!! you are a female!!! :D Have you laid an egg yet?!
Your hens are very calm around you, it shows how much they are taken care of and loved. Thanks !
Hi Deborah, you are so welcome and thanks for your lovely comments, they are appreciated, Sue
7
@@Pavlovafowl ò))))(m. L
I would have loved to see the rooster’s reaction when he saw for the first time his “offspring” those chickens 🐔 owe him a lot of explaining.
Ha ha! Actually as they live in a forest garden and hopefully have a 'natural' as possible life, several of my hens are monogamous and have formed strong and lasting bonds with roosters. One of them is Millefeuilles, who was the other broody hen I tried out with the duck eggs at the start of the film, so you are right, if she had decided to hatch them her long-term mate Spike might have had something to say about it! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Lol...that's so funny! I just imagined that rooster thinking... hmm maybe we should reconsider hatching more chicks sweetie! Lol. It's fascinating what you were saying about the jungle fowl! I'm definitely going to check out your other videos and look forward to seeing & hearing more about your forest garden! It looks delightful, by the way!
The reason you don't pull the egg shell off of them is because there are little veins on the shell that are absorbed by the chick and to pull it off prematurely would make the chick bleed out and possibly die.
Exactly, which is why I go very slowly and carefully. Once there is a hole in the shell, made by the chick it can breathe so it is only a matter of the babies being exhausted, you just have to be patient whilst they take a rest between efforts and wait for them to do most of the work. The other thing I found with the ducklings, was that in trying to break out they actually became very thirsty, often drinking the water drops off my fingers, whilst I was damping down the shell membrane. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Pavlovafowl ok
There is always that one chick that struggles getting out. But I actually pull the egg shell off in that case. It's too risky to just let it be because it may happen that the egg rolls on the side where the hole is while the chick is struggling to get out. I don't have the patience to keep watch over the egg until the chick manages to get out by itself. Oh and yeah....the chicks that I helped out were perfectly fine and in good health afterwards. I only pull the egg shell off if there is already a hole of course. Otherwise you get undeveloped and disabled chicks and you don't want that.
Good to know thx me lesson of the day
The veins themselves are not absorbed but the blood inside is. However you are very right about the bleeding out part.
Pearl was like "What the heck are you doing with my egg? Give it back!"
That is the sign of a super good mother hen, who knows she is on a mission to hatch. I was amazed because the duck eggs were so different to the smaller bantam eggs my hens lay but our hens, particularly the Cochins, have such a strong mother instinct and they so love having chicks that they are prepared to sit on anything that looks like an egg. I once found a chicken in our vegetable plot sitting on a potato! All the very best and so sorry I only just found your comment! Sue
A potato?!!! 😂
@@Pavlovafowl lllpl
{ear; was extremely nervous! she wanted to PECK!
Lovely hens! They weren't even too fussy about being picked up. Thanks for sharing this video, very cute.
Thanks Dan for your kind comments and you are most welcome. They actually are very friendly, I find it helps too if there is ever an emergency, they will trust you - unlike our neighbours' mother ducks - I still have the scars... just joking and all the very best, Sue
Pavlovafowl - Organic Forest Garden Poultry fb
.
Dan McCarthy
coz from my observation and from my experience
these the type of hen that are friendly towards human eventho within incubating time
You can tell she takes great care of them, she's kind to them
The hens that are 'good sitters' have such a kind expression, a loving mother 💓
Totally true! I just get addicted to having chicks because they all exude warmth and happiness at being together! All the very best, Sue
Thank you for sharing such a tender & sweet story...All my entire life I've been in total *AWE* of Mother Nature...
Hi there and thanks for your lovely comments, they are appreciated. Me too! There are some wonderful ways in which we can learn so much from her. I also never cease to be amazed at what hens can do - I'm about to edit a film 'Co-parenting' but you might be interested in this article which I never made into a film: holistic-hen.blogspot.com/2015/11/chicks-in-cold-weather-finding-some.html#.W4AcUxqYOkB it shows the amazing intuitive kindness of mother hens. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
So precious. Thank you and GOD bless you for helping those abandoned babies!
Hi there and thank you for your lovely kind words, they are appreciated. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
You are so gentle and soft-spoken with your animals. I love it. Thank you for the video!
Hi Andrea and thank you so much for your lovely comments, they are appreciated, All the very best from a sunny afternoon in Normandie, Sue
@@Pavlovafowl You're so welcome. Greetings from the U.S.!
That is so endearing ... you take the prize as the best duck mid-wife ♡♡♡ talk about keeping a cool head too ♡♡♡
goatgirl61 Thanks for your kind comments!! I just felt so sorry for that duckling but was so happy he had been able to make that initial hole and could keep telling me he was OK! The shell coming off was a real problem because I knew he need to be kept dampened down but didn't want him to get cold.
One time before my neighbour's duck deserted leaving just two unhatched eggs in the nest and we hatched them in the oven because we had no broody. Luckily we'd had the woodstove lit for breakfast and it was just at a nice 'mother duck' temperature!
All the very best, Sue
Pavlovafowl ♡
Pavlovafowl tgg
I love chickens & ducks, and I love your story! You are just wonderful with taking care of them -- and, Pearl is a sweetheart of a hen. ❤🐣🐔❤
that happened with my grandma but instead of the mothers deserting she died and a hen was ready to hatch but her nest was destroyed by a pair of roosters fighting for dominance so she put the duck eggs with her. the funny part was that the hen would go beserk when the ducklings would go into the shallow pond
+CommiGamer861 Hi there, That is most interesting. On certain occasions, they are rare but the male will take over the nest if the female dies, it can even happen with chickens if the hen has formed a couple with a specific rooster, as ours often do. I know a friend of ours who hatched ducks with a hen had exactly the same attitude when the ducklings went in the water, she would run up and down the bank crying for them to come back in. Luckily your grandma was organised to save the ducklings, you can not always be sure a hen will take to other chicks, I usually like to plan which hen to have as a mother, in this case it was a last minute thing. In fact I had several broodies available, luckily but Pearl was the star. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
@@Pavlovafowl I know this is super old- but my grandparents own a rooster who's a bit of a nanny hen himself. One clutch of chicks was orphaned after the hen was taken by a coyote, and the other two the hens were simply tired of looking after the much older chicks so they gave them the boot. This rooter took all 3 clutches under his wing (literally) and raised them up. He didn't lose a single chick and was quite the protective papa. The coyote problem at their farm has gotten way worse- to the point that they're down to 3 hens and 4 roosters from a flock of nearly sixty but the nanny rooster is still kickin.
@@dormiaria8780 Hi there, this comment thread may be old but it is still read! Your grandparents experience is quite rare although I have heard of it before, mostly though it is when a bonded pair of birds, so a rooster and hen that are actually bring the chicks up together, (this in itself is rare) and the hen dies. I've even heard of one occasion when a hen was sitting eggs and was taken by a predator and the rooster then sat and hatched the eggs. In my experience of keeping hens and roosters in a forest garden, they do pair off, as did/do their wild relatives the Junglefowl. I have a film here which shows one of my Polish roosters and the father of a chick keeping the chick warm at night: ruclips.net/video/0YYVTXx_qlc/видео.html (at 0.41). My contention is that the way in which the majority of humans bring up poultry creates problems for them because within the birds' nature and heritage there is the provision for both parents to take care of the chicks. Your grandparents must have the trust and well being of their poultry very much at heart because this rooster was allowed to express his natural instincts and care of the abandoned chicks. If this happens again you should try and film it or at least write it up because it is an all too rare experience and it makes people think that maybe preconceptions about roosters being aggressive or profligate about chicks and hens are more of our own making, which is so important!
Re predators: my sister has a similar problem (lynx, wild cats, mink and foxes) on the moors in Scotland but she recently got a flock dog, which is specially trained to guard free-ranging chickens. He actually turned up at an animal shelter as the owners of the farm where he was raised had died - he is a lovely creature, a Blue Merle Collie but there are other breeds that are either inherent flock dogs or can be specially trained - you might want to pass this on to your grandparents. All the best from France and thank you so much for your input - it is of great interest to me and I'm sure others who read the comments! Sue
@@Pavlovafowl I should talk to them, but the problem is their guard dog now likes to eat chickens. he's great with all other animals and children, but just poultry rings the dinner bell in Bear's head (their German Shepherd's name) so he can't be a flock guardian. I didn't know it was that rare since they've always had some kind of Nanny bird around :) I wish I had my old cell phone because I had pictures of him surrounded by part of his brood there.
He is cute, he gives you little kisses since he knows that it is you who takes care of healing his shell every day like a third mother.
my grandmother used to do that quite often,,,,put duck eggs under a setting hen....Hens and ducks treat babies differently so it wont work nearly as well putting hen eggs under a duck.....reason being,,,,,hens lead their young around in open ground and scratch for insects for them to eat. You will see the old hen do some scratching,,then step back so the chicks can then step up to find the bugs in the loose dirt. ,,,A duck wont do this,,,,a duck simply wanders around and lets the young duck simply do as best he can,,,,she wont scratch for them,,,and wont pick up a bug at all, unless she eats it herself. When the eggs hatch out,,,the little ducks think the hen is their mom and will all come running from danger when she calls. And even after they are pretty large, they will try to all get under her wings for protection, but there is just not enough room. They will bunch together and lift her completely off the ground in their rush...Their heads and necks dont have enough room so they peep through her wings and feathers to the outside...The fun starts with the hen though,,,if she walks past a pool of water,,,,the little ducks she has raised will all rush to the water for a swim,,and she gets all noisy and upset, thinking they are all gonna drown!!! HAHA!! And if its flowing water,,,they will all have fun and float along downstream with her fussing all the way trying to call them out!! HA!! They wont come out, until they have had enough. When they do get back with her,,,she will fuss at them while leading them all the way home
Hi there, that was a lovely comment and a great description of the ducklings' life with a hen. Our friend had a mother hen who used to run up and down the riverbank calling her ducklings to come out of the water. It is the one thing that makes them mad, having disobedient 'chicks' and of course you are right, she is worried they will drown. I hope you will follow in your grandmother's footsteps and raise poultry too! I have a photograph of my great grandmother with her hen and baby chicks, so I think it is in the blood. All the very best from Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
I would love to see a video on RUclips of that
My grandmother uses turkeys for that to
HaHa Exactly was about to comment. Hens getting mad at their "chicklings" swimming. LoL
bill45colt cuuuteness
You are sweet, there is pain in your voice when you talk about the non hatched eggs, I love you for that.
Thank you for that, it is a lovely observation. I absolutely hate it when I lose a bird for whatever reason. One of the saddest sights in bird keeping is an egg that has a chick but doesn't hatch, it is so sad. All the very best from Normandie, love Sue xx
I did not realize that you can't peel the shell off! I was thinking I would love to help that little guy out soon much by just pulling the shell off for him, then I read that is NOT a good thing to do! Thanks, a very interesting video!
Thank-you for your comments, they are appreciated! Absolutely, you have to be so careful because of the blood supply vessels, which you always see vestiges of when the chick has finally emerged and how close they are to the outer shell! Once many years ago, I saw our biology teacher do just that and the chick bled to death in front of our eyes, something you don't forget. As the duckling has already made a hole in the shell it is using its lungs and can already breathe, so there is no
need to hurry anything. I prefer to let the duckling do things at its own pace even to the point of kicking of the final piece of shell, only that way am I certain everything has sealed off and there is no risk. All the very best from sunny Normandie, Sue
Baby born in the palm of your hands, I bet he has a special bond with you and feels towards you that you are his mama.
الله يحفظ
اكتب من فانكوفر كنّدا 🙏🤝❤️
شكرًا لك على تعليقاتك - إنها موضع تقدير ولكن آسف لقد استغرق الأمر وقتًا طويلاً للرد! التعليقات ضاعت بطريقة ما! مع أطيب التمنيات من فرنسا ، Sue
What a sweet and relaxing voice has this lady, it seems she doesn't live in any stressful place. Greetings from Spain
Beautiful video!
Quick thinking on your part!!
When I was a child, my favorite book was called "Chirkendoose".
It was a delightful story about a little fowl, hatched from an unidentified egg then loved and nurtured by all the fowl in the barnyard!
Everyone claimed the little fowl as their own!
I'm 72 Years old and still remember the story clearly because it did, indeed, leave me with a lasting impression.
Your video brought fond memories back to me.
Thank-you.
Hi there and thank you for those lovely comments! I looked up your book and read a synopsis of the story - I will find it on line and do it full justice and read the whole text. Thank you for making me aware of this gem! I had another great comment recently from someone who was given a gosling, a duck and a turkey as pets and as they all grew up together they obviously thought they were all one and the same, an interesting hybrid rather like your storybook bird!. To this end when the duck and goose went in the water, so did the turkey poult...and I never knew this, even though we had turkeys on our farm...turkeys can swim really well! I'm so happy my video brought back fond memories for you and hope you enjoy more of my films as I produce them. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
745 dislike why ?🤔😶 she did the right thing, helped baby , i enjoyed it everything was positive and dislikes ( must be cruel people ). Thank you for the lovely video.
Hi there, in a really funny and ironic way it is a mark of the success of a video when it gets so many dislikes, Once a video hits a certain number of views, it will always attract the attention of those who love to press the dislike button, unfortunately along with that you can also get some really unpleasant comments too but you can ban those people. I just feel so sorry for the children on RUclips who must be so happy to have created a really successful video, usually of their favourite fluffy, lovable, pet and then are subject to the barrage of 'dislikers' I think that is really hard. Our society sadly engenders people with a propensity to dislike and frankly hurt others but then it also has great people like yourself who so make up for it! Thanks for your kind words, they are appreciated and very best wishes from Normandie, Sue
I find hens so cute & their funny running is also hilarious :) I wanna hug them & kiss them ;)
Hello 👋 subhan Allah beautiful birds🐦 thank you very much to this video Am from BAGHDAD IRAQ 🇮🇶
When my ex and I first kept ducks, the weeks old ducklings we adopted had been hatched by a mamma hen. They did absolutely fine. As novice keepers we read up and learned our Khaki Campbells loved water (not all ducks are as fussed about water), so we got them a kiddie paddling pool. They eyed it with suspicion for a few hours before curiousity got the better of them. Crazy head bobbing into the pool, lots of flapping about and as soon as the first one got in the fun began! They all piled in and it was like a duck carousel. Occasionally one would do a maddie and swim under the others, they'd all jump out and run around the garden quacking like the devil was after them!
A few burst paddling pools later (they have very sharp claws) we got a large, circular, heavy duty horse trough and half-sunk it into the ground. The emptying and refilling of the trough with a hose on a semi-sprinkler setting was a source of great excitement and generally cue for an orgy.
Ducks are comical to watch. They are hardy birds, more resistant to disease than most other domestic fowl and their eggs are exceptional. Because of where we lived we deliberately didn't train them to come to hand, so catching them was another source of riotous laughter.
I don't miss my ex, but I really miss our ducks.
Hi Irene, that is such a wonderful story, I really enjoyed it and your closing remarks are priceless! One of our reasons for moving is to have ducks and water - I've been looking into 'duckponics', have you come across this? It is an enclosed, cleaning system for duck ponds, where you run the water through a gravel type filter garden bed, much the same as a grey water system for a house. The ducks also get to eat the vegetation and the water, once filtered, is fed back into the pond. It sounds pretty good! I love Khaki Campbells and Indian Runners but there are so many others too I would love to raise. Hope you get some more soon and all the very best from sunny Normandie, Sue
@@Pavlovafowl Can't say I've heard of that Sue, but now you've told me I would defo look into it when I keep ducks again (this will happen!). Anything that helps keep things clean is a bonus because there is ongoing work involved. In my experience any especially water-loving ducks given access to water will turn lush area of lawn into mud, and they will dabble and dance in it and sometimes lay their eggs in awkward places. Ours were penned in about 200 sq ft overnight, with an additional 400 sq ft to roam during the day: within their pen they destroyed ALL vegetation. Fwiw, within their pen they were all quite happy nesting in a large second-hand dog kennel that we got on Gumtree for £40 :-)
"Mommy! Quit hitting with that paper towel! I'm trying to pip here!"
Can't pip without Mummy's warmth and the usual heavy moisture from a Mother duck, Pearl can provide the warmth but there is no way I want to get her that wet. Mother ducks usually swim just before hatch and I've seen them dripping wet on the nest, so a piece of tissue works fine. This is not an ideal situation but my intent is to save these ducklings in the best way I can without too much stress to my hen or them. If you take away anything from this video it should be that when humans intervene, i.e. put two nesting ducks so close to each other that they get confused as to which mother has hatched what - then expect a disaster and try to get out of it as well as you can - it's not the ducks' fault! All the very best, Sue
Bless you for doing this, I love watching those hens and ducks!
That was sooo cute seeing that duck hatch! They're cute coming out of the shell.
Thanks! Wait until you see the quail chick video - just uploading now. I agree though - I love ducks too! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
I have such a soft spot for babies and baby animals. God bless you! It’s so rewarding to watch this 💖
Hi Laurina the more good caring people in the World the better it will become. Thank you for your lovely comments, they are appreciated. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
You and Ms. Pearl did a wonderful job of saving and hatching out those babies!!! GOD bless you!!l
Aaww thanks that is so kind and very much appreciated. All the very best from a sunny afternoon in Normandie, Sue
I'm only half way through the video, I just have to say these hens are sooooo beautiful and sweet.Wish I could have pet chickens.
You're just the sweetest lady on Earth! I know this is an older video but I do so hope you & your birds are well!
Aaww , that is such a lovely comment! You absolutely made my day! Yes we are all fine and enjoying life in the forest garden! All the very best to you from Normandie, Sue xx
@@Pavlovafowl Was a pleasure! 💖 all the way from Texas!🌼
Ohhh omg, so beautiful job you’re done, I love to See those videos!
Thank you so much for your lovely comments, they are so appreciated! Best wishes from Normandie, Sue
So hens are the best mums! Obviously they are more motherly than ducks. Well done for their adoption!
Hi Chrys, Ducks do make good mothers, it is just these two mother ducks got so confused because they were both in the same coop and both due to hatch their eggs on the same day. This is not a thing ducks do normally, they really seem to like their own space. I am amazed the two mothers got on so well and accepted all the ducklings after we took them back! However you are right Pearl the Cochin is a fantastic mother. Thanks for your lovely comments, they are appreciated and all the best from rainy Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
Pavlovafowl - Organic Forest Garden Poultry Thank you so much for your lovely and very informative reply. You are doing such a great job and even though it is demanding, it must be very rewarding to work in the nature.
Not only are hens are great sitters, they’re so lovable looking with the sounds they make❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
Hi Julian, You are so right! I've made a film on mother and hen language, here is the link if you are interested: ruclips.net/video/Svrw3b_0p1Q/видео.html The sounds a hen makes to calm down chicks when they are scared is, I believe one of the most beautiful and expressive sounds ever! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Pavlovafowl - Organic Forest Garden Poultry Thanks! Hoping you have a great time with your friends 🐥🐤🐣🐔🦆
This could be a movie "Two hens from rival hen houses...." Great video, you are very knowledgeable and caring. I love my chickens and a duck has recently adopted us and sits in the garden all day. We have put out duck food and a large tray which she paddles in. She is quite a sassy lady.
you guys are great I'm only 13 and I learned something new from the video can't wait for the baby ducks to come
Hi there, that is such a lovely comment, we really appreciate it! Good Luck with your baby ducks and hope you will film them! I subbed your channel, so I'll get notification! All the very best from Normandie, Sue and Andy
Great job! To anyone with doubts,please put the eggs under in the night or darken the box. She'll get accustom over night.
Hi Eva and thank you for your lovely comment and also for the advice. It is always best to add eggs or chicks of whatever kind in the dark. Pearl however is pretty much a perfect broody hen, she will accept everything. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Thank you for doing such wonderful kindness .😀🤟
Aaww thank-you for that lovely comment, it is appreciated. Birds are such wonderful creatures, helping them in any way is a privilege. All the very best from sunny Normandie, Sue xx
Oh Sue, you are a true midwife, assisting life to happen!!! That was so cute and touching!!! Mille-feuilles what a lovely name for that hen :D Gros bisous de la belle province qui lentement se réchauffe xox
***** Awww Christiane, Thanks! It was a great experience.
That hen is so pretty - I had to think up a special name for her colouring, she is almost a Pékin/Cochin - just the tail is not quite fluffy enough! Gros bisous de la baie de Mont Saint Michel - 27 deg aujourd'hui et les hirondelles sont déjà arrivées!!! Sue et Andy xxx
This kind lady is a magician, and loves her chics. Kudos!
From Pakistan doing great job ♥️♥️♥️
Hi Danial, Thank you so much for your lovely comment, it is truly appreciated! Sending you best wishes from Normandie to Pakistan, Sue
I’m new here all the way from New Zealand - what a lovely channel!🇳🇿🥰
Welcome Frieda and thank you for your lovely comment! My grandfather emigrated to New Zealand in a cattle boat before the first World War. He did eventually return but he never stopped telling us about how much he loved his time out there. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
this is so touching , heartwarming , nice and clever ... Well think about people adopting us , a chicken that adopts perfectly knows the same as those people yet she feels the same love as if it are hers , which are in fact hers now , love it !!!
Aaww thanks Vicky thanks for your lovely comment! All the very best, Sue
Hi Sue ! It has been a true delite watching this , really ! When I didn't own any chickens I always had the idea many people still have today ( unfurtunately ) , yet that has changed . My image from a chicken back in time was simply that they didn't move much and ran away , so interest in a chicken as pets in my backyard ? no , I did not even see the sweethearts ! just like any other human being that doesn't know how a chicken CAN be in fact , my image since I got my very first one ?
I bought two Rhode Island Red hens , youngsters from about 6 months during wintertime so they were close to laying eggs , yet had to wait because they keep a winterstop , one of them suddenly started screaming and I was like uhm ? what is going on with that one ? and oowww that one is really soooooooooooo sweet towards me , she looks as if she wants to cuddle haha ,what a silly idea I get from her ... Now guess what that adorable chicken did ? she laid her head down on my shoulder when I was cleaning out the feeding dishes :D , so the other one ? screaming one ? she had laid her very first egg :-)) , ever since that day ? my image of a chicken : individuals like human beings with a very strong memory ( stronger than humans !!! ) and they are either truely cuddle birds or they do not want you to lift them up and are more on their own , they are smart and they can experience LOVE , in their way but they do ! same applies for ducks ! I so wished I could have a couple of ducks here but my BC is too small and in Belgium it is not really approved to have the wild ducks ( protected animals ) , all the love in the world to you and your birds Sue ! sweet regards out of Belgium !!! Xoxo !
Hi there ! You must have got a lovely view out there ! :D I'm owning at this point the Old English Games but these are very much ' wild birds ' , they are living in trees :) and they lay bio eggs haha because they simply know what to do , if you feed them , fine , if you don't even better because they like to find their own stuff and they are exellent in it ! A lot of people only want the birds to get some small breeds with their breeds but if it is for that only I have to decline because they are more than meatbirds and I'm having the suspicion they are close to extinction too !!! put them for sale and nobody knows what breed you're talking about :( , but they are lovely , we are havin one hen that just is so desperate to get chicks ! she sits on every pile of eggs she can find in the woods ! only two chicks have been born but question is how come they died ... Now in my backyard I use to keep all kinds of breeds and all of them showed so much of personality ! they are all stolen ! just to think in your mind " who does such things and wherefor ? " even my adorable rooster got stolen but now I am waiting untill neighbours let me know their chickens are safe and the thief has not returned and after that I 'm buying myself these : Rhode Island Red , adorable adorable fluffy buts called Marans and some precious nice cuddly buff orpingtons :-) , that also includes the roosters because in their character they were so adorable , my rooster from the Marans cuddled all the time ! the roosters always get treated so differently but not in here ! they are equal ! and I swear you get much of love back from them if treated like that , my roo definitely deserved hughs and his girls ! Nice to read you have liked it in Belgium ! So Sue , I'm keeping up with you anyway , and uhm keep posting this adorable stuff ! :)) lots of love out of Belgium from me and my girl , my lovely husband and our lonely hen " Auberry '' :)
I Love this LADY Shes an angel !!!!
Aaww that is so kind, a lovely comment and very much appreciated. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
So precious every time the baby duck made noise I kept wanting to hold it close.
Oh how true! The problem is once you've had one hatch of chicks/ducks/quail you just have to repeat the experience each year - or Spring isn't Spring! Well that's my excuse anyway! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
How precious, you have such sweet hens to just instantly jump into action like that
Hi there Dan, Thanks and yes the hens are so good at doing this, they instinctively are very caring. You might be interested in this little Cochin who looked after some chicks that were in a big hatch and were being left behind in the garden: holistic-hen.blogspot.fr/2015/11/chicks-in-cold-weather-finding-some.html#.WwwGGRqYOkB She worked out a strategy to help them all on her own! All the very best, Sue
Oh oh... moms both want the hatchlings to be theres... now what ?? Will see !!! Thats so nice ur helping, and softening the membrane THAT baby duck is stuck in.
Alisa, thanks for your comments they are appreciated. All the very best, Sue
Your chickens are sweethearts!
Hi there and thank you - I think so too! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
I loved this story! Never knew you could put duck eggs under a chicken to be hatched!
Hi Brenda thanks so much for your comments, they are appreciated. A good hen will hatch anything, they are amazing mothers - you might like to read this story about Pearl's sister - I never made it into a film but it reveals a lot about chickens as parents: holistic-hen.blogspot.com/2015/11/chicks-in-cold-weather-finding-some.html#.XOf1ex0v6V5 All the very best from Normandie, Sue
So sweet and kind. And that baby duck is so cute!
What a sweet lady you are and what lovely chickens and ducks you have! I suppose your beautiful hen was wondering how she ended up with such odd looking chicks!! Lol Fabulous video & well done to all of you!
Hi Sarah and thank you so much for those lovely comments - I do appreciate them! It never ceases to amaze me how easily hens accept others types of chicks. I've raised quail with them for years and they instinctively seem to know how they need to be so careful with them and much faster and up to speed than with them than hen chicks. What really startled me with Pearl that at one point her voice even became duck-like! I always think we can learn so much from the birds! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
@@Pavlovafowl That's an amazing observation! I agree very much. I have a couple of chicks that I hatched in the incubator & they haven't been around other chickens yet. I noticed that they mimic the songs of the wild birds they hear every morning outside the window! They sound more like baby Robin's than baby chickens!
This video is full of love.
Bellas tus gallinas ,te felicitó desde Perú
GOD BLESS YOU for helping those babies. I rescued a duck, sweetest little baby ever!
Thank-you so much for your lovely comments and well done you for your duck rescue too! I would really like to have ducks of my own and hope we will be able to move to place with more land and finally get some this year! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
my starling i rescued a Bird a new born ther was 3 but 1 escaped and one feel in the pool and died and 1 was luky so i called him lucky
most interesting thing I have watched in a while. thank you for caring so much!
Aaww what a great comment, thank you so much! All the very best, Sue
they are gorgeous creatures! u are lovely because of helping them!
Lovely names! So cute!
Thank you Susan! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Awww, that is adorable! And so are you!
That's a lovely comment Ruth! Thank you so much. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
I can feel your love right through the computer speaker :)
Hi Trude, Thank you for such a beautiful comment - you really made my day! All the very bets form Normandie, Sue
Q lindos el patos.🦆🦆🦆🦆🦆🦆💖💖💖💖💖👍👍👍👍👍👍
Your just a great mom. Salute
mesmerising in the most wonderful way..
Aaww what a kind comment! All the very best, Sue
Another great video Sue, many thanks. What a cutie pie - great job in hatch him/her out !Hoping to hatch 5 ducklings for the first time in an incubator ... have a very broody black rock hen but I understand the ducklings would very probably imprint on her and she belongs to a small flock that is separate so not comfy in letting her brood them, which is a shame. Great job as always. Loving your broody mothers ☺
That's so sweet to watch. You're awesome!
Aaww thanks! I really appreciate you taking time to comment. In future and starting from next week, I will be putting out a new video every Thursday. I already uploaded one for this week. All the very best from Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
Just to let you know I was not able to get a video out today as Andy has injured his back and I am doing all the work. Hopefully though there will be another video before the week end. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
باطم
سبخما
i wish i had a baby duck
Beautiful video🌷🌷🌷 smart decision😊😊😊
Thank you so much for your comments - they are very much appreciated! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
You've got really beautiful chickens.Different colours . love them all.
Hi there and thanks so much for your comments, I appreciate them. I have a mix of all kinds of old rare breeds of chickens and over many years they have created these interesting colours and patterns. I love it when we have new chicks hatching, as it is always a mystery to see how they will turn out and it can sometimes take over a year for the whole final colour and patterns to emerge, particularly with the Frizzles. All the very best from sunny Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
So sweet 😍...such a wee miracle of life xx
Hi Tracy, I know, I too love seeing birds hatch out - it isn't Spring without that! All the very best from Normandie and thanks for your comment, it is appreciated, Sue
Thank you so much for saving the lives of those little chicks ! =) you guys are awesome !!!! I was looking forward to your next update, and I am always positively shocked on how great you are! thank you again...
bassethoundmarco Awww Thanks!!! It is so kind of you to write that. It was a great experience, I love seeing chicks hatch and it was so easy with such great hens. I actually had four broody hens at the start, as there were just so many large eggs for such little hens but two of the hens just went crazy when they saw the duck eggs and there was no way they would sit them. Pearl ended up with so many but I made the nest very deep in the hay and she managed to cover them all. It was her first ever hatch, as she is only a year old but she is a star and such a natural mother. All the very best, Sue
Pavlovafowl it's funny you say that because a very similar experience happened to me when i lived in my casale maremmano (country house) in tuscany, Italy... I was about to go on a long trip to America during summertime (about a month...), and exactly the week before our departure I found out that one of my ducks was broody, and she was laying on 12 eggs! so before i ever went on any trip i used to bring my farm animals to our neighbours, and when i moved the nest with the broody duck, she decided to just abandon all of those eggs, so my dear neighbour distributed those eggs to 2 broody turkeys, and by the time i was back from the trip i had 12 beautiful white ducklings ! ahah I love animals so much... I hope one day I'll be living in such a beautiful place like where you live! cheers
bassethoundmarco What a great story, thanks for sharing! That was really inspired to get turkeys to sit the duck eggs - it would have made a great film! It's just so lucky we have so many broody hens - I've got 12 at the moment! I've found with hens that moving them when sitting usually goes fine but it can take 24 hours for a hen to remember you've moved the nest. However, ducks are quite different, in particular these of our neighbours, they are not tame, in fact although they are 'domesticated' they are in fact really still wild ducks. Tuscany is a beautiful area too, I hope some day you will get another country place. We lived in cities for some of our life and would never go back! All the very best, Sue
Pavlovafowl thank you so much =) and I definitely will return to the country as soon as possible,.. but at the moment I am only 17 years old, so unfortunately I have to go to university... however, as soon as I am done with it, I will start planning to find a beautiful meadow, such as yours, where I can build my house and happily raise a farm and my future family =) cheers!
Wow andinishhos dió verbu fit Yuu y York
I still love watching this video
Thank you John for expressing that, it is one of my favourites too. I am so looking forward to getting my own ducks some day, hopefully with the next twelve months but in the meantime I re-watch it too! All the very best from Normandie, Sue xx
I commend you for what you did for those little babies. Good on you! 🤗😇🤗😙
Hi Lissa and thank you for your lovely comments! You made a great start to my morning here in Normandie. All the very best, Sue
@@Pavlovafowl God bless you guys and keep doing your amazing selfless work. Your amazing!! BIG HUG to you 🤗😆 😇❤
Didn't know how to get a N.B duck or chick out of they're own egg carefully with a damp paper towels. Good to know thanks for sharing. Cutie little ones.
Great job, momma!
She is a star! All the very best, Sue
When the membrane goes like leather there is no blood in those little veins and its safe to carefully help the baby out. Exactly the same thing happened to me last week, they pipped and got shrink wraped, i peeled all 12 eggs very quickly and helped them out, now there all running around very healthy.
Hi there and thank you for your input, it is much appreciated. I just always err on the side of extreme caution in these cases. As I mentioned to others, as a child I witnessed a teacher try to help out a chick by pulling at the membrane of an egg and the chick bled to death in front of us - that sort of thing one never forgets. Plus in this case there was already a hole in the egg, the duckling was breathing well and I just took it slowly and let him do the work at his own pace. He was also very much stuck to the membrane, so I didn't want him tearing any skin or pulling out any feathers, so I knew that at his own pace he would feel if he was doing that and stop until he was dampened down enough for the membrane to peel off freely. All the very best and congratulations on saving your babies - shrink-wrapped is a great description!!! Sue
You are a good mommy
Wow great video. Glad I found your page.
Thank you Rebecca for your great comment! They are appreciated. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Salvasteis a los patitos bellos
.bendiciones
219 dislikes? I am puzzled...
Hi Paul, this is quite normal. Any time you produce a video that gets 'popular' your film becomes a magnet for the 'dislikes'. What is worse is, that you start to get what sometimes can be some pretty obnoxious comments. I used to reply to these but realised it was a waste of time, now I just block the users and delete the comments. One of our other sites 'Organikmechanic' on RUclips has a video with over 5 million views we had to hold the comments for review on that once it reached a few hundred thousand views. I think it is just a phenomenon you either live with or leave RUclips and as the ad revenue has really shrunk over the past years - I'm guessing the more it goes on and the worse it gets, people will leave. RUclips is a way a lot of self-sufficient home-based people share what they do and as a consequence, make a bit of cash but there is a limit to how much you can put up with. I see no reason for a dislike button - if you don't press the 'like' you either don't think it worthy, can't be bothered or don't like it - for me that's enough. Thanks for your concern, it is positive support like yours that keeps us going and in general I have to say that we are very lucky to have some great followers on RUclips, All the very best, Sue
The world is full of bully and that's the problem, I guess it's a fashion now for adult to behave like cruel teenagers. Now in those days is hard to deal with people and not to argue. Very wonderful vid I feel sad why people give dislikes , to something so lovely.
Paul Kreuz - I agree, Paul. This is a wonderful story and rescue effort.❤
I did dislike it. The reason? You're not allowing that animal to struggle to come out the way it should be. Any struggle makes it stronger. This seems unnatural.
@@Pavlovafowl It is the problem with the internet overall. Too much temptation to a certain immature or disturbed mind. More or less anonymous forum with lots of people watching. What could go wrong?
watching this with my brand new hatched baby duckling, hatched by one of my hens :) Couldn't be more perfect!
Aaww that is such a lovely comment. I send all three of you a big hug from Normandie, Sue xx
Awwww sooooooooooooooooo cute.
Pearl is beautiful and lovely.
I had a duck that layed 2 eggs out in the open, not even a nest, and it started to rain. I put the 2 eggs under a broody hen. She hatched them out and raised them as her own. Later as the baby ducks grew up they would still acknowledge their mother chicken by bowing to her in thanks for raising them.
That is a lovely story and thank you so much for sharing it. We can learn so much from birds about love and care, sadly something we humans are often not that great at expressing or acknowledging thanks for. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
😘😘😘😘😘😘😘 so cute!
You have a beautiful calming voice!
Hi Alex, Thank you for your kind comment - much appreciated. All the very best from a rather cloudy Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
I am so glad you didn't leave those eggs to die 🐣
You truly have a lot of patience. I most likely would have done the wrong thing and pulled the duckling out too soon because it was struggling so much.
Lovely video. Thanks for sharing.
You are very welcome and thanks for commenting, it is appreciated. All the very best from Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
Why Am I watching a baby duck trying to get out of his egg!
That was sweet tho!
Good Job
Hi Sam - because it's a feel-good video and this World needs a more fluffy element to it! Seriously though thanks for watching and for your great comment. All the very best Sue
What kind of chickens are those 2, They are gorgeous and adorable!
Hi there and I totally agree! They are bantam Cochin aka Pekin. They are amazing birds and the story of how they got to the West from ancient China, where only the emperor was allowed to raise them is fascinating. If you are interested I wrote it up here: holistic-hen.blogspot.com/2018/02/the-cochin-craze-story-of-addiction.html#.X4HLYHcv6V5 and the film is here: ruclips.net/video/OgoP6id53LI/видео.html All the very best from Normandie and hope you get some Cochins of your own! Sue
@@Pavlovafowl Thank you for telling me, I'll look them up!!
That was lovely to watch, thanks for uploading this
Hi there, Thank-you for taking the time to comment, much appreciated. All the very best from Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue
LOL.. At 4:49 "the zippers broken" Now that was funny..
Thank you Christine! I am the World's worst with zippers, I inherited the trait from my father and sleeping bags are a big nightmare for me so I could really empathise with this little duckling! All the very best from Normandie, Sue
1 neighbor leaves nonchalantly
2 parents forsake the babies
3 human comes to the rescue
4 hens supplied incubation services
5 person records the scenes
6 human narrates and participates in the caring of the babies
7 person edits clip
8 RUclips approves clip and starts promoting it
9 random person has time to watch stuff and he/she watches clip
10 random folks start mkn comments regarding clip
11 the end..
12 someone reads your comment, gives you a thumbs up and a red heart,writes: 'Thanks for your great comments, they are very much appreciated and moreover most original. All the very best from Normandie, Pavlovafowl aka Sue'
13 the end
very nice😍
كتير كيوت هي الجاجات مين هون عربي
Cool channel, thanks for sharing. We have just posted a few videos on wild baby ducks and some hand feeding from our palms.
Thank you! I've taken a look at your channel and the sweet baby duck video and subbed you. All the very best from Normandie, Sue
Thanks for a great video, I look forward to any others, thank you for the upload.
+mrbluenun Thanks for your comments, much appreciated: there are two other films about this hatch the second one is: ruclips.net/video/K8DCYhDnC9s/видео.html and there are also written posts as well here: holistic-hen.blogspot.fr/2015/04/duckling-disaster-what-to-do-when-your.html#.VTz8ueSlilM Thanks also for reminding me that I have been very remiss in not linking these films together, which I will put right some time today. All the very best Pavlovafowl aka Sue
Good mommy hen!
I enjoy your videos so much, thank you for taking the time to make them. I learn something each time I watch one. Best to you both :0)
brianzpartner Hi there, Thanks for your lovely comment, I am so happy you find these videos useful. It's good fun making them but when people take time to respond to them - that's the icing on the cake! All the best from us both, Sue and Andy
Very cute video! You handled the egg so delicately. The duck seems quite fond of your hand now lol
The hens seem a bit distrusting. Is that because they're egg laying hens? If so, when their eggs are stolen it breaks trust and pressures them to lay more since they prefer a full clutch. Sometimes they'll eat infertile eggs to restore some of their lost nutrients since laying is such a strenuous process.
Regardless, eggs are better off as compost than in your body: “Eggs have so much cholesterol, we can’t say they “contribute nutritionally.” … By law, according to the USDA, the egg industry “needs to steer clear of words like ‘healthy’ or ‘nutritious.’"
---
Why is it okay to exploit animals when they suffer like us? Unless you like abusing animals, why wouldn't you choose plants over body parts?
watch Cowspiracy, What the Health, & Dominion 2018
Peace, love, Veganism ✌