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Showing posts with label laying ducks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label laying ducks. Show all posts

February 23, 2018

Pekin Ducks


Pekin Ducklings
The Pekin duck has a long history with records in China going as far back as the 1300s. It was introduced to Great Britain in 1872 and then the United State in 1873. It has since taken over the US market as the go-to commercial meat duck.

The Pekin was bred for its meat, but can be considered a very good egg layer, too. Averaging 8 to 12 pounds in weight, it can lay 150 to 200 eggs per year, making it a great multi-purpose duck.

They are typically processed at six to seven weeks of age with its breast filet being about 21% of the carcass. As such, it has become a very popular commercial duck with a fast growth time and excellent feed conversion (only 2.4 pounds of feed per pound of live body weight gain). In culinary circles, it is the main ingredient for roasted Peking duck.

Female and male Pekin
The dinner table is not the only place the Pekin has become famous. The Aflac duck is a Pekin which originally came from our farm and the
was also the inspiration behind Donald Duck.

We have two names for our Pekin: the Pekin and Grimaud Hybrid Pekin. The Pekin and the Grimaud Hybrid Pekin are the exact same bird, exact same price, just under different names. We did this because some people know what a Pekin is, but not a Grimaud Hybrid, while others may want the Grimaud Hybrid specifically.

The Grimaud Hybrid is named as such because we purchase day-old breeders from Frimaud Freres in France every four months. It is called a hybrid since the Grimaud Hybrid is produced by crossing two strains of Pekin, one strain bred for high meat production and one strain bred for high egg production. By crossing females from the egg laying strain with the males from the meat production strain, you hatch a lot of ducklings that can be grown for meat.

Outside of the commercial market, advertisement, and entertainment industries, the Pekin is a very popular duck among kids and 4-H groups. It does well as a meat class bird at the county fair and is an amazing addition for any backyard hobbyist.

Breed
Temperament
Weight
Egg Production
Mothering
Bluish Eggs
Egg Size
Pekin
Calm
8-12.25 pounds
150-200/year
Poor
<2%
90-100 grams
Fertility
APA Class
Foraging Ability
Conservation Status
Our Show Quality
Flying Ability
Origin
89%
Heavy
Fair
Abundant
Meat Class Only
None
China

Information from our Duck Comparison Table



March 11, 2011

How Do I Know Which of My Ducks Are Laying Eggs?

Originally posted by John Metzer on Thu, Aug 05, 2010 @ 12:16 PM
 

There are several ways to determine which of your ducks are laying eggs.  No one indication is proof positive but collectively they can give you a good indication of which birds are laying eggs.  During the middle of every summer, we use these criteria in our duck breeder flocks to remove nonlaying birds.  If, for example, we can go through a breeder flock of 500 Rouen ducks, remove half the birds but only drop the egg production a little bit (due to the inadvertent culling of laying birds), we are much better off.  We have just cut our feed, water and bedding bill in half with barely any loss in egg production!

If you have Pekins, look at their bill.  If it is bright orange, they are probably not laying.  Those birds that have been laying for quite awhile have a washed out, pale bill.  Prior to production most Pekin ducks will accumulate xanthophylls in their bill and feet.  Xanthophylls are a pigment in corn, alfalfa, and some other feed ingredients.  But as the ducks start to lay, those xanthophylls are deposited in the yolk of the egg.  With high egg production, more xanthophylls are deposited in the eggs than absorbed in the feed, causing their bills and feet to become lighter and lighter in color.


In this group of Pekins, the female on the right is probably not laying.  Notice her bill and feet are darker orange and her feathers are bright and clean which means she has recently molted.  The female in the front left is probably laying well.  She has all her feathers but they are dirty, original feathers meaning she has not molted.  The female in the left back is missing her flight feathers which means she is now going through a molt and probably not laying.

The best way to know if your birds are laying is to catch them and measure the distance between their pelvic bones.  If the birds are laying, their pelvic bones are flexible and wide apart to allow passage of the egg.  If they are not laying, they are close together and rather stiff and nonpliable.  You do not have to turn the duck over to do this.  Just pick them up and slide your hand under their abdomen down to their pelvis.  Is the distance between the bones two fingers or three fingers or four fingers?   The more fingers you can get between their pelvic bones, the better chance they are laying eggs now.  Of course the larger breeds will naturally have more space between their pelvic bones so you need to compare among birds of the same breed or size.
The pelvic bones are only two fingers apart in this female Rouen - she is not laying.

The pelvic bones are four fingers apart in this female.  She is definitely laying!

On our next blog we will give you the results of our first cull.  How efficient were they in removing  the nonlayers?  What was our egg production before and after the cull?