Will ducks stay close to home?
They need enough space to roam but within a set of boundaries to ensure they are safe. Ducks don't typically leave where they call home but should return if they do. They can make great pets and can make good companions for anyone in the family, including the dogs.
Duck Coops
Housing: Ducks need shelter at night (and for the winter) and shade during the summer. If you already have a chicken coop, you can confidently keep your ducks in the same coop at night, provided you have enough room. But be aware — ducks don't put themselves to bed like chickens do.
Homeward Bound. Some ducks return to the precise location where they nested the previous spring, while others return to the same wintering area year after year. The ability of migratory birds to find these specific locations after being away for several months is a form of navigation known as homing.
Adult female ducks often return to former breeding sites. As many at 75 percent of adult female canvasbacks return to their breeding area each year, often nesting in the same pothole where they nested the previous year. This is also true of cavity-nesting species such as wood ducks, buffleheads, and goldeneyes.
- Provide ground cover (shade structures, bushes, trees, etc.) so your ducks can't be seen by aerial predators and can quickly run to safety if necessary.
- Fence your ducks' yard. ...
- Get a goose or livestock guardian dog to guard your ducks.
- Don't leave your ducks free for the night.
Once they are about 5-6 weeks old you can let them play in the water a little- we let them play in our bathtub with warm shallow water- and place to climb out of the water, while we cleaned out the brooder. If it's very warm outside you can let them play outside supervised for a bit too.
Ducks Don't Always Sleep at Night
Ducks are semi-nocturnal and stay active during nighttime. However, they don't spend all their nights sleeping; instead, these nocturnal birds choose chit-chat, migrate, groom each other, and relocate, mainly when the weather is severe.
Ducks spend most of their time during winter actively searching for food and resting to conserve energy (fat reserves) for use during periods of harsh weather when feeding time is limited. For some species, including mallards, important activities like courtship and pair-bond formation also occur in winter.
They are happiest if they can have some free foraging time every day, but can be successfully kept in a large pen as long as you bring them a varied diet of grasses, and insects. Dried meal worms, watermelon, and salad greens are favorite treats that also add valuable protein and nutrition.
Ducks mostly sleep floating on water.
They are flexible when it comes to their choice of where to sleep. For example, a species of ducks known as mallards can sleep both on land and water. Another species known as Muscovy ducks can also roost (sleep) on the ground.
Can ducks see in the dark?
Ducks can't see at night, but they can see well at dawn and dusk. At dawn and dusk, the world might appear dark and fuzzy to us humans, but not to a duck. That's because ducks' eyes are able to see ultraviolet light (UV) light far better than humans can.
Ducks do not form long-term pair bonds, but instead form seasonal bonds, otherwise known as seasonal monogamy, in which new bonds are formed each season. Seasonal monogamy occurs in about 49 percent of all waterfowl species.

If a duck follows you even after meeting you after a long time, it means the duck recognizes you and loves you. According to duck owners and caretakers, ducks do remember faces. They say that ducks would immediately recognize your face and chatter continuously while following you until they get your attention.
That's because ducklings follow the first moving object they see after hatching. While it's more likely to follow something that makes duck sounds, it's not uncommon for ducks raised by humans to follow the first person he sees and hears. Once that attachment forms, he'll follow you around for life.
Do ducks bond with humans? Ducks are known to build bonds with humans that are similar to the bond a dog would build with its owner. When raised by humans from the time of hatching, a duck will tend to bond to its owner like it would a flock of ducks.
Regardless of whether you keep ducks with, or separate from, your chickens, they do need to be locked up at night in a secure shelter with hardware cloth on all the windows. Domestic ducks can't fly (except for mallards and muscovies) and therefore are very susceptible to predators.
Ducks like to be outside and love to roost like chickens. If the weather is not freezing cold and it is safe, ducks can stay out all night long. Wild ducks sleep up in the trees whereas it is not safer for the pet ducks to be out without a pen or a shelter.
Ducks are just fine down to temperatures around 20 degrees, but below that they can suffer frostbite on their feet which could lead to amputation. In addition to the straw, wooden planks, benches or even low stumps in their pen will help the ducks get off the frozen ground and keep their feet warm.
It's important to provide your ducks with shelter from the rain, just in case they get cold or want a break, but most ducks will be extremely content playing outside in nasty weather. Just because ducks love the rain doesn't mean they don't require special attention and care on dreary, chilly days.