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simy1 11-05-2004 02:12 PM

wild ducks in the garden
 
This is a new. In the past I have had to cope with woodchucks,
rabbits, voles, deer, slugs, and wasps (not mentioning the ever
present vine borers). Foxes, possums, raccoons, squirrels, moles and
crows usually leave the garden alone, and small birds in general
produce negligible damage. I stepped out of the backdoor last night
after dinner to find five ducks in the garden (they fled on sight). I
can see why they should be there (all greens and garlic planted, many
small greens which I am sure can interest a duck). I found no evidence
of damage, maybe they had just arrived. How do I discourage them?

Rez 11-05-2004 04:16 PM

wild ducks in the garden
 
In article , (simy1) wrote:
This is a new. In the past I have had to cope with woodchucks,
rabbits, voles, deer, slugs, and wasps (not mentioning the ever
present vine borers). Foxes, possums, raccoons, squirrels, moles and
crows usually leave the garden alone, and small birds in general


Just wait til your crows discover what an almost-ripe watermelon looks
like!! and yes, they can tell ripe from green. We have to cover the
melons with chicken wire to protect 'em from crows. (I have 3 resident
crows that I don't mind cuz they discourage too many starlings from
accumulating, but even so I didn't agree to share my crop before it's
ready to pick!)

produce negligible damage. I stepped out of the backdoor last night
after dinner to find five ducks in the garden (they fled on sight). I
can see why they should be there (all greens and garlic planted, many
small greens which I am sure can interest a duck). I found no evidence
of damage, maybe they had just arrived. How do I discourage them?


Fence. Ducks are walkers, not flyers, if they have a choice.

~REZ~


Anonny Moose 11-05-2004 05:11 PM

wild ducks in the garden
 

"simy1" wrote in message
om...
. I stepped out of the backdoor last night
after dinner to find five ducks in the garden (they fled on sight). I
can see why they should be there (all greens and garlic planted, many
small greens which I am sure can interest a duck). I found no evidence
of damage, maybe they had just arrived. How do I discourage them?


Ducks are great slug and bug eaters, if you have that problem, so might
actually be of some assistance to you.

Karen



Grandpa 11-05-2004 06:05 PM

wild ducks in the garden
 
As a child in Seattle I had a pair of ducks who roamed the garden.
Never messed with the plants but they sure ate the bugs, and definately
love slugs!

simy1 wrote:

This is a new. In the past I have had to cope with woodchucks,
rabbits, voles, deer, slugs, and wasps (not mentioning the ever
present vine borers). Foxes, possums, raccoons, squirrels, moles and
crows usually leave the garden alone, and small birds in general
produce negligible damage. I stepped out of the backdoor last night
after dinner to find five ducks in the garden (they fled on sight). I
can see why they should be there (all greens and garlic planted, many
small greens which I am sure can interest a duck). I found no evidence
of damage, maybe they had just arrived. How do I discourage them?



Ray Drouillard 11-05-2004 08:13 PM

wild ducks in the garden
 

"simy1" wrote in message
om...
This is a new. In the past I have had to cope with woodchucks,
rabbits, voles, deer, slugs, and wasps (not mentioning the ever
present vine borers). Foxes, possums, raccoons, squirrels, moles and
crows usually leave the garden alone, and small birds in general
produce negligible damage. I stepped out of the backdoor last night
after dinner to find five ducks in the garden (they fled on sight). I
can see why they should be there (all greens and garlic planted, many
small greens which I am sure can interest a duck). I found no evidence
of damage, maybe they had just arrived. How do I discourage them?



I understand that ducks tend to ignore the garden and eat the slugs and
other insects. Some people let the ducks in on purpose.


Ray




hawk 11-05-2004 10:06 PM

wild ducks in the garden
 
Wild duck is delicious! Try a pellet gun.

hawk

simy1 wrote:
This is a new. In the past I have had to cope with woodchucks,
rabbits, voles, deer, slugs, and wasps (not mentioning the ever
present vine borers). Foxes, possums, raccoons, squirrels, moles and
crows usually leave the garden alone, and small birds in general
produce negligible damage. I stepped out of the backdoor last night
after dinner to find five ducks in the garden (they fled on sight). I
can see why they should be there (all greens and garlic planted, many
small greens which I am sure can interest a duck). I found no evidence
of damage, maybe they had just arrived. How do I discourage them?



belly 12-05-2004 12:03 AM

wild ducks in the garden
 
On 11 May 2004 05:51:54 -0700 in
,
(simy1) graced the world with this thought:

This is a new. In the past I have had to cope with woodchucks,
rabbits, voles, deer, slugs, and wasps (not mentioning the ever
present vine borers). Foxes, possums, raccoons, squirrels, moles and
crows usually leave the garden alone, and small birds in general
produce negligible damage. I stepped out of the backdoor last night
after dinner to find five ducks in the garden (they fled on sight). I
can see why they should be there (all greens and garlic planted, many
small greens which I am sure can interest a duck). I found no evidence
of damage, maybe they had just arrived. How do I discourage them?


A shotgun works wonders. Leave a dead one in the garden as a message.
Could they be eating snails?
In any case, if they're wild, and not refugees from the local park,
they may just be passing through.

Pat Kiewicz 12-05-2004 11:02 AM

wild ducks in the garden
 
simy1 said:

This is a new. In the past I have had to cope with woodchucks,
rabbits, voles, deer, slugs, and wasps (not mentioning the ever
present vine borers). Foxes, possums, raccoons, squirrels,


As they do mine, respecting the fence topped with shock wire --
excepting the wasps (good guys, so you want them on patrol) and
vine borers (which fly during the day and never learn to respect
the gardener despite the number of borers that get killed).

moles and crows usually leave the garden alone, and small birds

in general produce negligible damage.

Mole tunnels are a nuisance, if only because the voles may make
use of them and water runs away through them. Crows and birds
need to be netted out of my corn and sunflower patchs, though.
And newly-fledged starlings make a nuisance of themselves, pulling
blossoms off the squash and eggplants. And the feathered set
can really do a number on ripening corn. (This year I'm going to
try sewing bags from old sheet to cover the ears. Paper bags don't
work anymore.)


I stepped out of the backdoor last night after dinner to find five ducks
in the garden (they fled on sight). I can see why they should be there (all
greens and garlic planted, many small greens which I am sure can interest
a duck). I found no evidence of damage, maybe they had just arrived.


Curiously enough, I noticed a duck in the garden last month (or, rather, I
noticed a duck running up and down the fence on the outside of the garden,
sent my daughter out, and she saw the duck in the garden.

Something had pulled up all my just-sprouted peas and left the roots and
a few tiny tips behind. As such a thing had never happened before, I blamed
the duck.

How do I discourage them?


I don't know. As far as I can tell, the ducks haven't been back here. Once they
are past the period of courting and nesting (when they hide themselves away
all over the place) they usually stick to wetlands and ponds. I've only ever
seen them in people's yards in springtime.

--
Pat in Plymouth MI ('someplace.net' is comcast)

Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
(attributed to Don Marti)


simy1 12-05-2004 03:03 PM

wild ducks in the garden
 
"Anonny Moose" wrote in message ...
"simy1" wrote in message
om...
. I stepped out of the backdoor last night
after dinner to find five ducks in the garden (they fled on sight). I
can see why they should be there (all greens and garlic planted, many
small greens which I am sure can interest a duck). I found no evidence
of damage, maybe they had just arrived. How do I discourage them?


Ducks are great slug and bug eaters, if you have that problem, so might
actually be of some assistance to you.

Karen


I doubt it. Right now the lettuce is 3 inches high, at its tenderest.
The slugs used to be a major pest but years of Sluggo applications
have eliminated them. The cabbage caterpillars are not there yet. My
only hope is that they are after the earthworms, which are incredibly
dense in my garden. It has rained every night in the last five nights.

simy1 12-05-2004 04:05 PM

wild ducks in the garden
 
(Pat Kiewicz) wrote in message ...
simy1 said:

This is a new. In the past I have had to cope with woodchucks,
rabbits, voles, deer, slugs, and wasps (not mentioning the ever
present vine borers). Foxes, possums, raccoons, squirrels,


As they do mine, respecting the fence topped with shock wire --
excepting the wasps (good guys, so you want them on patrol) and
vine borers (which fly during the day and never learn to respect
the gardener despite the number of borers that get killed).

moles and crows usually leave the garden alone, and small birds

in general produce negligible damage.

Mole tunnels are a nuisance, if only because the voles may make
use of them and water runs away through them.


I was lucky when I laid chicken wire under my beds at the start. It is
all broken now, having rusted away, but I feel it occasionally when I
dig in to remove some large taproot. It creates enough disruption for
the moles to stay away. Voles used to come (and dig tunnels) on their
own.

Crows and birds
need to be netted out of my corn and sunflower patchs, though.
And newly-fledged starlings make a nuisance of themselves, pulling
blossoms off the squash and eggplants. And the feathered set
can really do a number on ripening corn. (This year I'm going to
try sewing bags from old sheet to cover the ears. Paper bags don't
work anymore.)


Yes, I have prudently stayed away from corn so far and that has saved
me quite a bit of trouble. The crows, which used to dominate bird life
in my yard (a big group numbering at least ten), are gone, courtesy
almost certainly of the West Nile virus (as are the bluejays, one of
which I found dead). Without them, hawks have returned, with attendant
decreasing rodent population, and the number of songbirds (whose eggs
were eaten by crows) has also gone up.



I stepped out of the backdoor last night after dinner to find five ducks
in the garden (they fled on sight). I can see why they should be there (all
greens and garlic planted, many small greens which I am sure can interest
a duck). I found no evidence of damage, maybe they had just arrived.


Curiously enough, I noticed a duck in the garden last month (or, rather, I
noticed a duck running up and down the fence on the outside of the garden,
sent my daughter out, and she saw the duck in the garden.

Something had pulled up all my just-sprouted peas and left the roots and
a few tiny tips behind. As such a thing had never happened before, I blamed
the duck.

How do I discourage them?


I don't know. As far as I can tell, the ducks haven't been back here. Once they
are past the period of courting and nesting (when they hide themselves away
all over the place) they usually stick to wetlands and ponds. I've only ever
seen them in people's yards in springtime.


I see them as well in the spring. In the darkest days of garden
rampages, I thought that I would ultimately garden in a chicken wire
cube, closed on all six sides.

Liza 13-05-2004 02:05 AM

wild ducks in the garden
 
These ducks aren't a pest, they are your friends.
They will eat all your slugs and snails that are pests.
They won't eat your vegtables or scratch up any new seedlings like chooks
would. And the small amount of manure they leave behind certainly won't
hurt your garden.

Encourage them.

Don't take the pellet gun to them, the snails are much harder to control.

"simy1" wrote in message
om...
This is a new. In the past I have had to cope with woodchucks,
rabbits, voles, deer, slugs, and wasps (not mentioning the ever
present vine borers). Foxes, possums, raccoons, squirrels, moles and
crows usually leave the garden alone, and small birds in general
produce negligible damage. I stepped out of the backdoor last night
after dinner to find five ducks in the garden (they fled on sight). I
can see why they should be there (all greens and garlic planted, many
small greens which I am sure can interest a duck). I found no evidence
of damage, maybe they had just arrived. How do I discourage them?





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