So you’d like a pet duck?

So you’re thinking of getting a duck?

Spring time brings thoughts of flowers and sunshine and little Easter bunnies, chicks and ducks. But before you make a hasty decision based on fluffy cuteness, let me share a few facts about ducks.

1. Ducks reach full size in about 5 weeks. They are cute and fluffy for 2 weeks and then they grow up. Ducks can live 10-20+ years, depending on the breed.

2. Ducks poop everywhere. You cannot train them.

3. You cannot raise a duck and “release it to the wild.” Mallards are wild ducks. Most other ducks were domesticated by humans. That means they no longer have wild instincts, can’t migrate and are usually too fat to fly. It is illegal to own wild ducks without a permit and illegal to release domestic ducks on public land. In some areas it is considered abandonment and can result in cruelty charges. It’s also a death sentence, as ducks raised by humans can’t fend for themselves in the wild. Did you know bread is bad for ducks? It lacks the basic nutrients they need to grow and thrive.

4. Qualified avian veterinarians to treat your special pet are few and far between. You can find a vet who treats parakeets, but not one who will treat your duck. If you do find one, expect to spend about $120 for a basic duck check-up.

5. There is a reason for the saying “sitting duck.” Ducks need predator-proof pens with hardware cloth on all sides, top and bottom. They must be in these secure pens from dusk to sunrise in some areas, and at all times in other areas. Good pens that you build yourself start at around $300. Your home is not an exception because you haven’t seen a predator or you live on a pond. Raccoons reach through chicken-wire and climb over chain link with ease. Eagles and hawks don’t need to carry off your duck, they just grab a piece.

6. You won’t be able to take a vacation for the next 10-20+ years because there is no such thing as a duck sitter. You will realize this too late, when your vacation is already planned. Ducks require complicated care. Note: None of your friends or family wants to watch your duck while you are on vacation. They asked me to tell you that.

7. Ducks are more maintenance than the space shuttle. Bob Tarte wrote that line in his book, “Enslaved by Ducks.” Believe him. Don’t get a duck. Just read his book instead.

8. Ducks are extremely emotional. More emotional than cats or dogs. If you raise one duck and that duck depends on you, you cannot leave that duck alone for even one day without that duck missing you and getting upset/depressed/scared when you are gone. Don’t do that to a duck. Ducks need duck friends.

9. Ducks are time-consuming. They need twice-daily care, for at least 1/2 hour each time, every day of the year, rain or shine. They won’t thrive unless they get much more of your time than that. But that is the bare minimum amount of time required twice a day, every single day, without fail.

10. Ducks don’t believe you should have hobbies. Want to meet friends for dinner? Have to put your ducks away before dusk first. Want to have brunch on a Saturday? Need to clean the duck ponds first. Like to knit, sew, paint, listen to music, see movies, watch TV, play games, ride a bike? Forget it. Your sole hobby if you have a duck… is your duck. End of hobbies.

11. Do you live with your parents? Absolutely do not get a duck. You think you’ll keep the duck forever, but you will grow up and get interested in your friends or go to college. And you cannot keep a duck in your dorm room. Your parents absolutely do not want to care for your duck while you’re on a date or away at school. Your parents will tell you your duck died and give it away. Seriously. They told me to tell you that. Do not get a duck until you own your own home, can pay vet bills on your own, and can afford food and amenities for your duck.

12. Do you rent your home or live in an apartment? Every year thousands of people get ducks only to give them up because their landlord/girlfriend/boyfriend/parents/neighbors complained. Giving up a duck means that duck will probably be euthanized or suffer. Do not get a duck first and THEN research whether or not you’re allowed to have a duck. Ducks are extremely loud. Too loud for neighbors. Way, way too loud. Trust me on this.

13. Have a dog? Think he’s old and friendly and wouldn’t hurt a fly? You’re wrong. Your duck will spaz out and flap in a way that will engage your dog’s innate prey instinct. Your dog will pick up your duck and shake it to death while you watch in horror. Yes. Your sweet little dog will do that. Your dog is not an exception. And it will be your fault, not your dog’s fault. Your dog is just being a dog. Do not get a duck if you have a dog. Your duck will taunt your dog. Your duck will chase and bite and taunt your dog until your dog bites it. That will also be your fault. Your duck is just being a duck.

14. Your duck is social and needs duck friends. Your duck does not want to live with just you. Your duck needs other ducks and more ducks means more poop. (See #2).

15. Every duck is a unique individual. Ducks are particular, and don’t automatically get along with other ducks. Two male ducks can kill each other. Too many male ducks can kill a female duck. Larger ducks will pick on smaller ducks and stronger ducks will try to kill weaker or injured ducks. Ducks act like dinosaurs much of the time. Cranky, cranky dinosaurs.

16. Ducks bite. Male ducks bite all the time. They do not bite because they are mean. They bite because they love you. They bite hard. They bruise. They constantly bite your ankles, hands, arms, feet and face. You must wear long sleeves and long pants and socks and shoes to visit your ducks. 100 degrees outside? Make sure you’re wearing long pants and long sleeves to visit your ducks. Muscovy ducks have a ridge to their beak that can tear your skin off. Muscovy drakes often also protect their territory or decide you are a threat. Then they attack you. They fly at you and beat their 6-foot wing span wings at you, bruising and welting you. Their talons can be 1 1/2″ long and they will try to claw at you in mid-air. They bite and tear at you and chase you down, faster than you can run away.

17. Ducks make a huge mess when they eat. Duck food attracts rats and mice. In some areas, mice attract snakes. LOTS of snakes. Duck poop attracts flies. Having a pet duck means having rats and flies. It’s a package deal. Your neighbors will love that. Think you can kill the rats? Poison them and they will die in your duck pond, poisoning the pond your ducks drink from. Or their carcasses will attract predators. Try to trap and release them instead. Come winter time you can find them conveniently living in the roof of your house, or in your basement, for warmth.

18. Having a duck means hearing awful horror stories from everyone around you. People will think that because you have a duck, you must really want to hear their story about how a duck flew into their windshield. Or how their dog brought a duck in through the doggy door and splattered blood all over the walls! Or how their neighbor’s kid had a duckling but dropped it on its head and it had seizures and threw up before dying. Or how your neighbors had ducks but raccoons climbed into their pen and ate them. Or how their grandma had ducks and killed and plucked and slaughtered and cooked and served them for dinner. Or how a hawk flew down and ripped into a duck but no one ever took it to a veterinarian. Or how there’s this duck at the park that limps and drags itself along but that’s just nature! Gosh, aren’t those stories great? People can’t wait to share their duck stories! (All of these story examples are actual stories told to me by people who could not WAIT to share their wonderful duck anecdote!)

19. Horrible duck stories will give you nightmares. Only you’ll dream that your own duck is suffering or in danger or being eaten or maimed. You will have this nightmare a lot.

20. You will worry about your duck every day that you have it.

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LIVE FLAPPER CAM!

All Flapper, all the time!

Free Videos by Ustream.TV

NOTE: Flapper Cam is only viewable in the daytime. Ducks are in their predator-proof pens at night or aviary during the day, unless I’m home with them.

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Shop the Mr Flapper Store

We have a few “Mr Flapper” cafepress items for sale, and hope to have more soon.

Just a note: We don’t aim to make a profit on the products. The cost goes to cafepress. The item prices are set at a very low margin so they don’t really benefit rescued ducks. The items are just for fun. Also, cafepress quality is so-so. We’ve done REAL printed tees in the past, and that’s too expensive to do again. So just know that the shirts in particular don’t last forever. Wash them inside out and hang them to dry to ensure they last longer.

Here’s a link to the store:

http://www.cafepress.com/mrflapper

tote bag
Carry your french fries in style, with this Flapper tote.


organic cotton tee

For drakes: Organic cotton never felt so soft and patriotic.

messenger bag
A great bag for ducks on the go.

womens tee
For hens: Ringer tee in pink and other colors too.

baby
Babies need Flapper style, too.

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Penny for your thoughts?

Hey Penny? How was your day, kid?

good good good
“My day was good. Pretty good. Good day. Not bad. Good. Good day. You?” – Penny

Wow! You seem to have a little energy this evening, eh Penny?

who me
“Who me? Yes. I do! I have a lot of energy most of the time. But every once in awhile I just run out of zoomies.” – Penny

“Like today I played with the cats for a while, but then they ganged up on me and they GOT me and now I’m playing dead.”
– Penny

play dead

“Okay let’s play again! WHEE!” - Penny

whee

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Penny



Guest of Hotel Flapper, originally uploaded by tifotter.

Penny is a guest at Hotel Flapper this week. Her family is taking a trip to Disneyland and she gets a trip to Hotel Flapper while they’re gone. Don’t worry, Penny. They’ll be back to get you in no time. You’ll see. We’ll have fun while they’re away.

Right now Penny and I are going to go for a walk. Penny has lots of nervous energy because it’s tough being a little dog in a whole new place.

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OMG!



Thanks and quacks to Cute Overload for mentioning Mr Flapper on their website today.

You guys are the best. Thanks, Meg!

XOXOX,

Mr Flapper’s human, Tiff

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About the Site

MrFlapper.com is the blog of Mr Flapper Duck.
flap

Flapper was born in April 2004 and adopted from a feed store in Lynnwood, WA. He now lives a life of luxury in Seattle along with his human, some other ducks and cats. He is a self-proclaimed “celebrity duck” and receives more holiday cards than anyone in the family. Flapper would like to say “thank you” to all of his fans, all over the world.

If you’d like to view the blog from the beginning of Flapper’s life, start here and then work your way up from the bottom of the main site page, http://www.mrflapper.com.

Cast of Characters
tiffany
Tiffany adopted her first pet, Miss Amelia Dingo, in 1996. The following decade saw many additions and a few sad goodbyes. In 2004 when she bought a house, her family expanded to include some awesome ducks. She needs a vacation, badly.

flapper
Flapper was born in 2004 and adopted from a feed store in Lynnwood, WA. He is a self-proclaimed “celebrity duck” and receives more holiday cards than anyone in the family. He is not only good looking, but also has a great personality.

o'malley
O’Malley Peepers came home as a rescue from PAWS.org. He is by far the snuggliest duck of the bunch and loves to cuddle. He will rip the stuffing right out of Flapper if he even THINKS about touching the girls though. DON’T EVEN THINK IT, FLAPPER!

chewy
Chewy Magooey was a rescued foster duck who decided to stay. Chewy likes peas, chewing on stuff and pooping when you least expect it. Chewy’s biggest fear is the super bitey O’MALLEY monster. Eeeks!

petunia peach
Petunia Peach is a rescued muscovy hen. She is O’Malley’s girlfriend, for now. She enjoys singing and catching bugs but does NOT like to be chased by Chewy. She keeps new rescues in line and doesn’t take crap from anyone.

meelee
Miss Amelia Dingo (Meelee) was born in NYC in 1995 and adopted from the ASPCA a year later. She licks plastic and eats the cheese off doritos. She will snuggle, but only privately. Do not disrespect her.

simon
Simon is big and dumb. He was born in NYC in 1997 and adopted from the ASPCA. He cries like a baby girl and purrs like a chainsaw. He gives hugs from the heart though. And he leaves a trail of fur in his wake. Murower?

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Kozmo Kirby Memorial Fund



This fund was established in memory of Kozmo Kirby, our very special big lug of a duck. All donations to this fund go exclusively to help rescued ducks. Funds are used for things like food, veterinary care and transportation to forever homes.

feather

For anyone who would like to contribute to the fund in Kozmo’s memory, you can use the paypal donate link below.


Thank you!

Kozmo Kirby was one big lug. He was Flapper and Georgie’s duckling and was born on May 13, 2005. Kozmo did a lot to further the Hair Club for Men in his short lifetime. He will be remembered for his fabulous pool parties and good-looking toupee. Kozmo passed away on Monday, July 14, 2008 after battling a seminoma cancer tumor. We still miss him.

As of July 11, 2009, your donations to this fund have helped 10 ducks and 2 chickens:

– Juno, a call-hybrid duckling who went to her forever home on August 30, 2008.
– Frank, a Muscovy drake who received veterinary care for a leg injury from a bb gun, and then was placed in a forever home.
– Mr. Dodo, a little call duck who looks just like Juno, and joined her in her forever home after a quick wellness check at the vet.
– Three sick ducks who came to us in March 2009. I’m calling them Jane (the sickest girl), Lily and Sam (the boy). Jane passed away from her illness/neglect on March 26, 2009.
– A pekin named “Jake the Drake/Happy Jack” who was dumped at a park and had a neck injury. He recovered and was placed in a forever home on Whidbey Island.
–Emilio the rouen duck and Victor the pekin duck, who went to their new forever home on June 20, 2009.
–Olivia & Racquel the chickens
–Sunny the handicapped pekin duck
–Turk & Rex, the crazy rescued muscovy drakes from MillCreek

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Boswell the Goose

This is a video of Boswell the Goose. He also has his own blog, in response to all the well-deserved publicity he is getting. If you’d like to view his blog, you can find it at:

http://dailyhonk.blogspot.com/

By the way, Boswell? If you see this… you’re not fat or even big. It’s called “high wing load” buddy. Don’t let anyone tell you differently.

XOXOX,

Tiff, Flapper & the flock

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Happy Couple



Happy Couple, originally uploaded by tifotter.

Today I went to see Ms Bruiser, a beautiful pekin girl who we placed in a new forever home in early June. She and four other rescued ducks now live together in a great forever home. Ms Bruiser used to be very imprinted on humans and in fact had never seen another duck until she stayed at Flapper’s house for a few weeks in May. Now five weeks later… she knows she is a duck. It’s pretty cool to see her so well-adjusted and loving being a duck. She has a pekin boyfriend now who loves her dearly, and they are all doing great in their new forever home.

It was a little sad to see her less friendly with me, but it’s definitely for the best. She came over to see me very briefly, bit me, and let me pick her up and kiss her head. Then she went right back to her big boyfriend. It’s the perfect “Independence Day” because Ms Bruiser has truly learned to be a duck and not to depend on humans so much anymore. Happy Independence Day, Ms. Bruiser.

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