Ducks 101

Bantam Ducks

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If space is limited in your yard, think bantam ducks — one-fifth to one-third the size of standard ducks. “Large” for a bantam is less than 2½ pounds.

All are beautifull­y ornamental and make sweet, sassy pets. If you like to competitiv­ely show, American Poultry Associatio­n recognizes three bantam breeds: Calls, East Indies and mallards. American Bantam Associatio­n adds Carolina Wood Ducks. Unrecogniz­ed breeds include Australian spotted ducks, silkies and silver appleyard bantams. Check them out!

australian spotted duck

origin: United States

colors/varieties: Greenhead, bluehead, silverhead; weighs 32 to 34 oz.

eggs: Lays 50 to 125 small or medium-size cream, blue or green eggs per year; very broody

traits: Strong flier; docile, friendly, a great forager, ideal for insect control

call

origin: Holland

colors/varieties: many; weighs 20 to 26 oz.

eggs: Lays 20 to 50 small white eggs; nonbroody

traits: Can fly but not very far; females quack loudly and often, making the breed not good for people with close neighbors

carolina Wood duck

origin: United States

colors/varieties: Brown with white markings most of the year, but males assume colorful plumage during breeding season; weighs 23 to 25 oz.

eggs: Lays 6 to 16 small off-white eggs; broody

traits: Strong flier; claws on feet allow wood ducks to perch, selfrelian­t, a popular ornamental duck

east indie, also called black east indie

origin: United States

colors/varieties: Black with a green sheen; weighs 24 to 30 oz.

eggs: Lays 30 to 80 small eggs that have dark gray shells early in the laying season, fading to white or green-tinted as the season progresses; nonbroody

traits: Strong flier; very active, hardy, popular pet

Mallard

origin: domesticat­ed in antiquity

colors/varieties: Gray and snowy wild mallard coloration; weighs 36 to 40 oz.

eggs: Lays 20 to 50 small to medium white to bluish-tinted eggs; broody

traits: Strong flier; hardy, self-reliant, an excellent forager

silkie

origin: United States

colors/varieties: Black, white, dusky, snowy, gray, more; weighs 30 to 38 oz.

eggs: Lays variable number of small off-white to greenish-tinted eggs; broody

traits: Nonflier; unusual silky plumage, tame and friendly

silver appleyard bantam

origin: England

colors/varieties: modified mallard (colored like full-size silver appleyard); weighs 30 to 36 oz.

eggs: Lays 50 to 80 small white eggs; broody, outstandin­g mother

traits: Can fly but not far; tame and friendly

 ??  ?? Mallard duck
Mallard duck

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