Ducks and Geese: Standard Breeds and Management

Part 5

Chapter 51,198 wordsPublic domain

It is recommended that after the eggs have been sat upon for twenty-five days, that they be taken from the nest and placed for about one minute in water heated to a temperature of 104°. Thirty days are required for incubation. After the eggs have hatched leave the hen and goslings in the nest for twenty-four hours; after the young have become thoroughly dry remove hen and brood and pen them in a large, roomy coop for four or five days. When the goslings have reached this age--four or five days--they are perfectly able to take care of themselves. The hen should then be taken from the goslings, which should be allowed freedom to roam at will, but they should always be cooped up at night.

FEEDING AND DRESSING FOR MARKET.

The first feed for goslings is grass, fed on sod; a small allowance of corn meal, slightly moistened, is also given them. Sand and charcoal are sometimes mixed with the corn meal. They are fed on the above food three times a day for a couple of days, when they are given a ration composed of equal parts by measure, bran, middlings, and steamed cut clover or cooked vegetables. This feed is given them morning, noon, and night, until they are 8 weeks old, when they are penned to be fattened for market at 10 weeks old.

To fatten young geese, place them in a pen, not too large, so that they will not exercise too much, and feed three times a day all they will eat up clean of the following: Corn meal mixed to a dry crumbly state, and beef scraps amounting to 20 per cent of the bulk of the corn meal. While fattening young geese they should be kept as quiet as possible; no excitement whatever should disturb them. When feeding approach them quietly, and do not irritate them in the least or they will not fatten, but will "throw out" or grow another crop of feathers. At 10 weeks of age, or when the tips of the wings reach the tail, they are ready for market and should weigh between 8 and 10 pounds.

When young goslings are to be dressed for market they are killed by cutting them in the roof of the mouth, severing the artery, or by stunning them by hitting them a sharp, quick blow on the head. The picker uses a box in front of him about the height of the knees, holding the bird with the left hand and clasping the feet and wings together; he places the head of the bird against the box and holds it in place with the knee. Pick the feathers from the body of the bird, then dampen the right hand and brush the body to remove the down. Leave about 2 inches of feathers on the neck, and also leave feathers on the wings at the first joint. Lay the wings against the body of the birds and tie a string around to hold in position. I lace the birds, when picked, in cold water for an hour or so to plump them; if they are in the water too long they are liable to bleach and become water-soaked. They are then iced up in barrels already to ship to market.

Young geese should be marketed in October. It is best to market all possible before cold weather sets in. It is much harder to dress a gosling in cold weather. The feathers set tighter, and in picking them the flesh is torn.

CROSS BREEDING.

The most satisfactory results are to be had by breeding pure standard-bred stock without crossing. But to those who are partial to crosses the following are considered the best to make: (1) Wild gander on African goose (fig. 35); (2) Embden gander on Toulouse goose (fig. 36); (3) Embden gander on African goose (fig. 37), and (4) Embden gander on White China goose. These crosses will give good growth and the young birds will dress well for market. Crosses should only be made for market purposes, and should always be bred from original stock.

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FARMERS' BULLETINS.

These bulletins are sent free of charge to any address upon application to the Secretary of Agriculture, Washington, D. C. Only the following are available:

No. 15.--Some Destructive Potato Diseases: What They Are and How to Prevent Them. No. 16.--Leguminous Plants for Green Manuring and for Feeding. No. 18.--Forage Plants for the South. No. 19.--Important Insecticides: Directions for their Preparation and Use. No. 21.--Barnyard Manure. No. 22.--Feeding Farm Animals. No. 23.--Foods: Nutritive Value and Cost. No. 24.--Hog Cholera and Swine Plague. No. 25.--Peanuts: Culture and Uses. No. 26.--Sweet Potatoes: Culture and Uses. No. 27.--Flax for Seed and Fiber. No. 28.--Weeds; and How to Kill Them. No. 29.--Souring of Milk and Other Changes in Milk Products. No. 30.--Grape Diseases on the Pacific Coast. No. 31.--Alfalfa, or Lucern. No. 32.--Silos and Silage. No. 33.--Peach Growing for Market. No. 34.--Meats: Composition and Cooking. No. 35.--Potato Culture. No. 36.--Cotton Seed and Its Products. No. 37.--Kafir Corn: Characteristics, Culture, and Uses. No. 38.--Spraying for Fruit Diseases. No. 39.--Onion Culture. No. 40.--Farm Drainage. No. 41.--Fowls: Care and Feeding. No. 42.--Facts About Milk. No. 43.--Sewage Disposal on the Farm. No. 44.--Commercial Fertilizers. No. 45.--Some Insects Injurious to Stored Grain. No. 46.--Irrigation in Humid Climates. No. 47.--Insects Affecting the Cotton Plant. No. 48.--The Manuring of Cotton. No. 49.--Sheep Feeding. No. 50.--Sorghum as a Forage Crop. No. 51.--Standard Varieties of Chickens. No. 52.--The Sugar Beet. No. 53.--How to Grow Mushrooms. No. 54.--Some Common Birds in Their Relation to Agriculture. No. 55.--The Dairy Herd: Its Formation and Management. No. 56.--Experiment Station Work--I. No. 57.--Butter Making on the Farm. No. 58.--The Soy Bean as a Forage Crop. No. 59.--Bee Keeping. No. 60.--Methods of Curing Tobacco. No. 61.--Asparagus Culture. No. 62.--Marketing Farm Produce. No. 63.--Care of Milk on the Farm. No. 64.--Ducks and Geese. No. 65.--Experiment Station Work--II. No. 66.--Meadows and Pastures. No. 67.--Forestry for Farmers. No. 68.--The Black Rot of the Cabbage. No. 69.--Experiment Station Work--III. No. 70.--The Principal Insect Enemies of the Grape. No. 71.--Some Essentials of Beef Production. No. 72.--Cattle Ranges of the Southwest. No. 73.--Experiment Station Work--IV. No. 74.--Milk as Food. No. 75.--The Grain Smuts. No. 76.--Tomato Growing. No. 77.--The Liming of Soils. No. 78.--Experiment Station Work--V. No. 79.--Experiment Station Work--VI. No. 80.--The Peach Twig-borer--an Important Enemy of Stone Fruits. No. 81.--Corn Culture in the South. No. 82.--The Culture of Tobacco. No. 83.--Tobacco Soils. No. 84.--Experiment Station Work--VII. No. 85.--Fish as Food. No. 86.--Thirty Poisonous Plants. No. 87.--Experiment Station Work--VIII. No. 88.--Alkali Lands. No. 89.--Cowpeas.

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Transcriber Note

Minor typos may have been corrected. Illustrations were repositioned to avoid splitting paragraphs.

End of Project Gutenberg's USDA Farmers’ Bulletin No. 64, by George E. Howard