Wednesday, January 23, 2013

Duck Farming And Keeping Farm Records

Duck Farming And Keeping Farm Records


It is worth keeping a record of what happens on your farm during your venture in keeping ducks. Not every one finds keeping records easy or useful. It seems a hassle, but it is fun. Normally for a short term and for a small flock you can remember the most important information. But if you are planning to keep ducks for a longer time and if you want to make a business you need to keep track of what happens.



Depending on your type of business in your duck farming project, you can keep track of:

- how many eggs are laid every day
- how much food you give every day
- the costs you make on feeding and health care
- the investment you have made to build a shed
- which ducks are good breeders and which are not
- how many eggs you incubate and the date you have put them to incubate
- how many eggs hatch
- how many of the hatched ducklings survive and how many die

This is not a complete list, neither a compulsory list. You decide yourself of which information you keep a record, depending on the type of your business.

The information you gather can help you to make management decisions or help you to find a solution to a problem. For example:

- When you know when you put eggs to incubate, you can calculate the date that they will hatch. You can then prepare for caring for the ducklings in time..

- You can estimate when you will need to replace ducks as they reach the end of their productive period.


1 comment:

  1. Among those breeds, I think khaki campbell ducks are very suitable for commercial egg production. They lay more than 300 eggs per year and very suitable for duck farming business. Personally I am raising about 200 khaki campbell layers with 70 Indian runner. Thanks for your informative post.

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