BEFORE COMMENTING, PLEASE READ: I know that there will be a lot of people who are mad about some of the things that go down in this video. I get it. I'm mad at myself, too. When I committed to sharing my experience of starting a farm on social media, I knew this would mean that I would need to share both the successes and failures. What happened in this video most definitely represents a failure. I share it in the name of transparency and the hope that others learn from my mistakes. It would feel dishonest not to share what happened. There will probably be a lot of debate whether or not I needed to wait until nightfall vs. do the introduction in the early morning hours as I do here. When it comes to chickens, you should always introduce new young ones at night when they have gone to sleep. When it comes to geese and ducks, the answer is not nearly as conclusive. They don't sleep the same way nor exhibit the same behaviors. In fact, I have found geese to be much more vigilant and aggressive at night when compared to the early morning. Based on the research I did, plus what I have observed with goose behavior here on our farm over the past couple of years, I didn't think the time would matter much. Maybe it does. Maybe it doesn't. I have no way of knowing that with certainty. Ever since this incident happened, I have talked to several goose-owning friends, and they were all very split on the issue. I would be curious to hear the perspective of others who have raised geese and attempted this activity. Now with all that said, please feel free to roast me in the comments section.
Appreciate your honesty. Nothing is textbook. You do very well. I’m amazed at people who respond who know nothing about what your going thru. We are getting a 30% hatch rate whether in the nest or in the incubator. Thanks for sharing your journey. BTW. The adult geese didn’t accept the incubator ones either. Now there are 2 flocks on the farm :)
This is why tractor supply does it the way that they do it. Reintroduction to a mother rarely works. Very irresponsible. Keep your hands off mother nature if you don't know what you're doing.
I've always appreciated that you are willing to show both successes and failures on the farm. I don't believe life is black and white. I think taking chances and trying out new things is really important to success.
I thought he was going to put eggs that were close to hatching into the nests, rather than already-hatched goslings! The way he did it, it was too obvious to the goose sitting on her eggs that those goslings were not hers!
My exact thoughts when he was collecting the babies, it makes sense to swap the eggs that are not hatching with ones that are, I thought it a bit of a pathetic mistake to be honest.
I've had sucess with that approach, at least with Muskovie ducks, and Chickens. It's too late, once they've hatched. Birds bond with the 1st animal they see. That's why human raised ducks, and other foul act like people, and follow everywhere. You'll get there. Be patient with yourself, as well as your flock. 👍🙂
Everybody makes mistakes, especially people (like you) who have the balls to step out of their comfort zone and achieve their goals. Stories about success are easy to tell. The fact that you are willing to show us both the good and the bad is refreshing.
I’ve actually had great success by putting newly hatched goslings right out in the open where adult geese can easily see them, like right near their primary food source. You must A) provide goslings with warmth and food/water and B) keep goslings physically separated from adults with temporary fencing, like poultry netting. Within a few hours, inevitably one or more adult geese refuse to leave the goslings and will set up camp right next to them. By late afternoon, I cautiously pen all of them up TOGETHER. You must still provide babies with warmth as they will not instinctively crawl underneath an adult. But living in Texas, by March or April, this is usually not a major problem. By the following morning, the adoptive parents will protect those babies tooth and claw. Have done this on three or four separate occasions, always with great success. The trick is allowing the entire flock to have an opportunity to adopt. Nesting moms are not receptive without extreme trickery. But other adults (ganders, too!) are quite protective of their own kind.
I did something like that with chickens. Last year I had a hen that wanted to be a mother. Unfortunately her two chicks died within 24 hours. She had a breakdown (really, acted mad, crushed against the window, scared even the rooster) I had hatched some chicks in an incubator. They were allready two weeks old, but I tried anyway. Set up a cage and let the adult chicken decide if they wanted them. That mother hen adopted them the very second she saw them. Would sit next to their cage all day long, showing them food and talking to them. The chicks needed some time to understand her, but after two to three days, they were inseparable. Perfect match. The rest of the flock accepted them as mother hen's chicks.
LISTEN, you do an AMAZING JOB with your animals Morgan! I know you tend to listen to others more often than you don't. Just keep doing you! You are an awesome, caring individual. Your love for your animals shows and your animal husbandry is on point. Just don't let them get to you. Listen to your heart. ~mushzilla~
I smuggled one little gosling in with my bonded pair. The male wanted a baby so bad that he was following the baby chics around. I pulled the mama out of the nest and put the baby in and they ran to the gosling, immediately accepting her.
@@Tanks_In_Space you will be very surprised. We tried this same method on chickens but during the day. It doesn’t work by that was the first thing that came to mind.
Announces he is going to smuggle the chicks under the gooses... Proceeds to bring the box right infront of her and hands the chicks to her... Clearly, he needs to learn how to be a better smuggler
my only problem is that instead of allowing yourself to get a bite from the goose you allowed the baby goose to get hit multiple times to the point of it giving up, i understand that mistakes happen and that you couldnt have stopped her from her natural instincts but you shouldve taken a bite on the gloved hand Thank you for keeping it honest and real and showing both the ups and downs, that takes a lot of strength to show what actually happens on a real farm
I feel like this year was an extraordinarily cold spring that really messed with the goose’s ability to hatch eggs naturally, which might make interpreting your results from this year’s approach kind of hard
Trail and error. Positive self talk is also important as a farmer! You're gonna be okay and your choices have helped you know how to succeed in the future. We love you💗
Admittedly I know nothing about raising geese, but are you letting them have a little too much power over certain aspects of the farm? They seem to be really arrogant creatures, like if you give them an inch they just say "screw you" and take the whole ruler!!
You were there to pull the plug when needed and we know you care deeply about all the birds and critters on the farm. Looks like that mom knew her babies were about to hatch and there was no room at the Inn.
Appreciate your honesty and I respect you for it, as well as for all your kindnesses in working to ensure the best life for your animals. Curious for confirmation that the baby gosling with the 2 Mommas was one of their own??? And very glad the gosling recovered!!
Thank you for showing us that ugly part. A lot of people would never show something like that, you made a mistake and learnt from it. Showing this proves how humble and true you are.
When the smacked gosling stopped kicking and struggling and just gave up... 😭😭😭 So glad it's okay now.
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I've had success doing this in the middle of the night when it's pitch black outside. Farming is all about learning and weve all made mistakes. I appreciate you sharing the good and the bad.
My chickens are accepting of any babies. My hens have hatched a lot of my ducklings and I've had them foster babies too. Nothing wrong with a chicken raising a goose.
You have shown more empathy raising your flocks than most farmers I’ve known and seen. You have nothing to feel bad about. Keeping it real and honest, is why I have watched your videos from the very beginning.
Hey, Morgan! As always, I truly appreciate your transparency with your content, it's so refreshing and real. Everyone makes mistakes, even those responsible for taking care of animals, but you clearly want to and try to learn from your mistakes and aren't making these decisions with intention of harm or anything. Thus I commend you for showing us the good, the bad, and the ugly. As for your low hatching rates, perhaps the issue is that one of your ganders is infertile, maybe one of the newer/younger ones considering that you had better hatching rates last year. Just some food for thought! Keep up the good work and don't beat yourself up too much! You have fans here from all around the world cheering you on and learning with you! Cheers from Ontario, Canada!
As a new homesteader it makes me feel better that even my favorite homesteaders can make mistakes sometimes too. Thanks for sharing and I'm so delighted that the little one is doing okay now and pulled through. Your humility and humor is what keeps me coming back. Please never change
Your honesty is appreciated! Perhaps this warning will help others better decide whether or not to take this type of risk. I hope you get fair criticism instead of hate.
Putting almost-hatched eggs under the mother goose might be better than an actual gosling that she had not been communicating with during incubation. Just a thought.
I agree with other posts. Good intentions, but wrong approach. Should've switched soon-to-hatch eggs instead of goslings. Should also have moved the mother out first..
Too many people edit their videos and won't show things that may make them look less than "great". Thank you for showing us the good and the "bad". I'm sure you're not the only person to try something like that. Nature is nature and people can't attach human emotions to nature taking its course. Good job being real. 👍🏼
Thank you so much for keeping it honest and real. We learn best from our mistakes and if we are really lucky we learn from the mistakes of others and spare ourselves a certain failure, if we're smart and paid attention. I appreciate you sharing this misadventure and keeping those of us who might have attempted it in the future from making the same mistake.
Once again, I commend you for being willing to show us everything. Man, it's tough to watch sometimes but it is SO valuable to see the real side instead of the "produced" side. You're saving a whole bunch of other animals the stress and harm by letting a whole new generation of interested farmers learn through your mistakes.
Wow!! I have done the same only with chickens! They wanted to hatch their eggs but had no success. So i incubated some and then put them under mama hen! Thankfully she did adopted them! But we have to learn some how and sometimes it's so hard to watch!! So thank you for sharing your experience!! Stay safe!
We had a very similar thing happen at a local pond area near us, where a woman had released 9 ducklings into the pond where there were other ducks and their ducklings. We knew she meant well, but the first thing that happened was one of the mothers with her preexisting ducklings went on a killing frenzy. A local wildlife rescue was called, but by then it was too late. The pond was full of floating duckling corpses, only 3 survived to be caught. The rescue centre ended up putting a plea out begging people to never just release ducklings and hope for the best, and to instead just take them straight to a rescue, regardless of if they were raised by people or otherwise (a lot of people hatch for the sake of it and then don't actually want to deal with the older birds, so they release them - which is basically a death sentence). It was eventually come forward that the woman who released them had caught the ducklings by a busy road and that the parents had flown off, so she just assumed they'd be on the pond nearby, which proved to be a big mistake. While I'm not pleased you did this experiment, especially having known that waterfowl don't just foster other babies (see: your past video on trying to get a duck to foster ducklings, and she ended up both scared of the group, and would attack them), I'm glad you're at least aware of it being wrong. Though the fact this is your second attempt trying it worries me for the future. Please don't do it again.
I had a similar problem this year with my chickens, lots of broody mammas that we couldn't break up. We had one nest attacked and the eggs/ newly hatched chicks were killed. The others were sitting on duck eggs. We only had one successful hatch, but they were transplants from my own incubator as well. We were hatching turkeys in the house and after the first two hatched I took some out to one of our momma birds that I truthfully didn't think were going to make it as they were already passed their hatch date. She hatched both but one had issues with its yolk and expired but the other is doing great and she recently brought it back to the main flock. All that being said, my best advice would have been to take eggs that are ready to hatch, distract the mom and swap in the good eggs. That seems to work the best and she gets the sense that she did the all the work too. IDK, giving momma birds already hatched babies rarely seems to go well but at least it looked like one of her eggs hatched in the end. Thank you for being honest with us and thankfully that little one was okay.
I'm learning a lot from your posts , its great that you tried something in a way that helped us learn more about your farm , you are a very caring person , I'm glad the little guy is ok.
So instead of encouraging someone who is trying to learn, you call them names and make them feel bad? That's a great way to stop people from trying anything new, well done.
@@SuperMrgentleman That wasn't my point. My point was if someone does something wrong, you explain to them the right way so they learn. If you just call them names and don't explain the correct way to do something, that person won't learn anything from your comment and might repeat the same mistake so that doesn't help anyone.
Thank you so much for being so true and open about your life and work on the farm! I already watched so many of your video’s and learned so much! It has given me a great desire to start my own homestead!
I can only imagine how bad it must feel having that little one get beat up like that. You can't predict what will happen. Was it a mistake? Yes. But you learned from it. Over all you are still a budding, learning farmer as you have said yourself. You dont have a long family history of this to learn from. And sometimes learning on the job can be heart breaking. You do more for your baby birds than most farmers who would just leave weak ones to die and not bother trying to help them. I am glad that the little one that got hit rebounded! Honestly if you wanted to do a hybrid approach I think the only way you can get away with it is to put actual eggs that are in the process of hatching under them so that the mothers think it's their egg. So shoo the mother off, sneak the eggs, ect. But that run the risk of you can't help if there are hatching trouble so it's up to you if you want to take that risk.
That most decidedly was not all your fault, Morgan. You are a good and conscientious man. Shit happens! Especially in nature. You’re very transparent in sharing that with us. Good luck! You’re a good farm daddy.
Even taking the pinned comment into account you most definitely could have saved the gosling earlier and it’s injuries could have been avoided altogether. Still like the channel but that was a pretty big whoopsies
Glad to see that the little one survived, thought it had it's neck snapped or something similar, despite the failure great job on pulling the plug when you did! Goodluck to the mommas and the babies growing
*@Gold Shaw Farm* 2:17 Can't you add some extra support in the middle of that ramp? Some boulders or something? Or some extra wood support? It seams to be too steep in the beginning, because most of the ramp lies flat on the ground.
Only try giving babies at night when it is dark. I've had 100% success giving broody chickens purchased chicks, keets, etc. Never tried giving babies to geese or ducks. But when I switched out the fertile eggs you sent me with the unfertilized eggs under the goose, I did it at night. You want sleepy birds.
Built On the Rock Homestead - From Morgan's pinned comment: "When it comes to geese and ducks, the answer is not nearly as conclusive. They don't sleep the same way nor exhibit the same behaviors. In fact, I have found geese to be much more vigilant and aggressive at night when compared to the early morning. Based on the research I did, plus what I have observed with goose behavior here on our farm over the past couple of years, I didn't think the time would matter much."
@@wendyweaver8749 interesting. My geese are more aggressive during the day, and my Pilgrim geese came from Morgan. During the night they appear to flee from danger.
When you explained in the video what you were going to do, it sounded like an interesting idea, BUT what I understood was that you were putting the EGGS about to hatch. Not the goslings..... For sure the goslings would be attacked by the protective geese. They are not like some chicken, and there is a reason geese are this aggressive and protective....When animals are worked up they don't see the difference between friend and foe and anything becomes a target. It was a very naive mistake, but glad u learned from it.
Thanks for uploading~ I feel you on the part of wanting to try to see if they’ll adopt. Sometimes it’s just all about trying and finding out what works and what doesn’t. Also, who knows perhaps future farm owners may find your videos and learn from it 😄 Happy that the little one was okay at the end! 😍
I volunteered with a wildlife rescue and the way you introduce baby goslings is you make sure the goose has some of their own young ones of the same age following them away from the nest and introduce them with the other babies. It does not work while they are still nesting, only while they are already following the mom.
Only comment I have is a goose bite doesn’t hurt much you need to brave it up a bit more bud . Even a scratch from the claws might sting but your a big man I’m sure you can handle a scratch or two …lol
Definitely agree with this! The pain is all because of fear. Once you accept that it doesn't hurt that much then it hurts even less because most of the pain is just in your mind because you're afraid it will hurt. They've done studies that show that being afraid of the thing that will hurt you amplifies the pain. Also, don't try to rip your hand away so fast because that's when their 'teeth' cut your skin, if they bite you just leave your hand where it is until they let go, it will hurt even less again.
There was a video in which he purposely did not say that and the ducks were confused. I can't seem to recall which one it was. Too many to look through..
Thank you so much for sharing your experiences. Learning curves are just that Learning curves. What doesn't work one time might work the next and vice versa.
Just thought of something for Toby’s doghouse opening to keep geese out. Wonder if a doggie door flap could be secured to the top of the opening and then teach Toby how to use it by putting tasty food inside. Just a thought lol.
I appreciate your effort, and I am glad that you decided to share this with us. That said, I've had better luck with placing about to hatch eggs in front of a goose and letting her roll the egg under herself. Then she feels the egg hatch and is more likely to adopt the chick.
Oof, that was hard to watch, I had to pause the video several time when I saw this baby gosling being flipped over defenseless, waving its tiny legs and getting hit by the mama goose.. 😭 Thankfully you stopped it in time, but I was very scared since it wasn’t moving in the box afterward, I thought it was injured or dead.. That’s a hard lesson learned, but a lesson nonetheless, so thank you for posting this video, and have a good day :)
Phew! Happy to see the little one doing well. That was a tense video! We all have to learn the hard side of things. Some more obvious errors than others when you end up hating yorself, but even so none of us relative newbie farmers are perfect and we all make mistakes that we know we will never repeat. Take care and phew, big sigh of relief with the end bit!
You have to somehow put the babies under her without her seeing you doing it. I think most people will be upset because they think you should know everything and most people learn from there mistakes and just don't show it. So thanks for being real on your channel. Maybe ask next time before you try something so people that do have knowledge can give you some ideas before you try it. Anyone that has watched you for very long knows that you would never try to hurt any animals you have a big heart and a kind soul that is why I enjoy your channel you take great care of all of your animal's. You do a great job Morgan keep up the great content you have on your channel.
If you had such a low hatching rate not only with the incubator but also with the four mother's, could it be that your ganders aren't doing their job well enough or aren't fertile? Do you need to introduce a few new male?
I have seen others successfully do this with live babies. Maybe if you have two people: one to distract the mom and one to sneak the babies under her without her seeing you do it?
I think that's the key - random chicks wandering around could come from any other mother in the flock, but one that appears under you is definitely yours.
No hate, no ugly comments from me and appreciate the warning. It was worth a try, another channel had a female goose adopt a group of hatchlings that were running around and took on mom role. What I do know is that raising critters and farm life is not glamorous and often ugly. What I also know is that you tend to research everything so you aren't being stupid or careless and have a heart of gold when it comes to being a good steward you are top of list. I love your videos
Oh wow! I was holding my breath when you were trying to get the babies back in the box. So glad they’re all ok. Ya know, I’d try not to be so hard on yourself Morgan. You not a noob. You’re trying your best every day for the success of your animals and your farm. It’s ok!! 💜
Thank you for letting me know the babies were ok. I didn't watch incase they had been killed by the mother goose after reading the title. That's a relief. I'm not a farmer but do watch Morgan's channel.
You had a lot of courage showing this one, I give you tremendous credit for that. When you were getting ready to set down the babies, I was screaming "NO!". I have to admit, I got very mad and upset, and was relieved when you admitted it was a dumb thing to do. I really do enjoy your uploads, please keep it up and best of luck to you and the success of your farm.
BEFORE COMMENTING, PLEASE READ: I know that there will be a lot of people who are mad about some of the things that go down in this video. I get it. I'm mad at myself, too. When I committed to sharing my experience of starting a farm on social media, I knew this would mean that I would need to share both the successes and failures. What happened in this video most definitely represents a failure. I share it in the name of transparency and the hope that others learn from my mistakes. It would feel dishonest not to share what happened.
There will probably be a lot of debate whether or not I needed to wait until nightfall vs. do the introduction in the early morning hours as I do here. When it comes to chickens, you should always introduce new young ones at night when they have gone to sleep. When it comes to geese and ducks, the answer is not nearly as conclusive. They don't sleep the same way nor exhibit the same behaviors. In fact, I have found geese to be much more vigilant and aggressive at night when compared to the early morning. Based on the research I did, plus what I have observed with goose behavior here on our farm over the past couple of years, I didn't think the time would matter much. Maybe it does. Maybe it doesn't. I have no way of knowing that with certainty. Ever since this incident happened, I have talked to several goose-owning friends, and they were all very split on the issue. I would be curious to hear the perspective of others who have raised geese and attempted this activity.
Now with all that said, please feel free to roast me in the comments section.
Hopefully you are having a great day Morgan
Appreciate your honesty. Nothing is textbook. You do very well. I’m amazed at people who respond who know nothing about what your going thru. We are getting a 30% hatch rate whether in the nest or in the incubator. Thanks for sharing your journey. BTW. The adult geese didn’t accept the incubator ones either. Now there are 2 flocks on the farm :)
It's fine it happens
This is why tractor supply does it the way that they do it. Reintroduction to a mother rarely works. Very irresponsible. Keep your hands off mother nature if you don't know what you're doing.
I haven't seen to much into the video but thank you for the uploads lately and the transparency ! Much love *sheeeeeeesh*
I've always appreciated that you are willing to show both successes and failures on the farm. I don't believe life is black and white. I think taking chances and trying out new things is really important to success.
Raise a farm, they said ,it will be fun they said ...
I completely agree
You're right. And I think Morgan never blames setbacks on "reality" -- he feels like he always has agency over situations.
Morgan how you learn if you don’t try and kind of experiment how would you know ??? 🐣🐣🐣🐣
I thought he was going to put eggs that were close to hatching into the nests, rather than already-hatched goslings! The way he did it, it was too obvious to the goose sitting on her eggs that those goslings were not hers!
Exactly what I was thinking. For what it is worth, I still think you are the fastest human ever, Ben Johnson. ;)
Ditto
My exact thoughts when he was collecting the babies, it makes sense to swap the eggs that are not hatching with ones that are, I thought it a bit of a pathetic mistake to be honest.
Yes he did it wrong. Your supposed to wait until night and put them under her.
That's what I thought he meant also🥚🥚
Smuggle the developed eggs not the baby gooselings
Good idea
4:08 That's how I interpreted what he was going to do.
Yes!!
right? the fuck he thinking? thats how some birds get other birds to hatch their eggs.
I've had sucess with that approach, at least with Muskovie ducks, and Chickens. It's too late, once they've hatched. Birds bond with the 1st animal they see. That's why human raised ducks, and other foul act like people, and follow everywhere. You'll get there. Be patient with yourself, as well as your flock. 👍🙂
Chicken: What is this, a baby? Mine now.
Goose: rrrreeeeEEEEEE--
Well said.
Haha!! So accurate!
I got a new batch of chicks and turkey chicks.. fricken broader rejected 2 chicken chicks but is loving the turkey chicks
Nah, its more like Hisssss. Hissss. (Nibble on some food or drink some water) Hissss. Hissss.
Everybody makes mistakes, especially people (like you) who have the balls to step out of their comfort zone and achieve their goals. Stories about success are easy to tell. The fact that you are willing to show us both the good and the bad is refreshing.
This
I thought you were going to try the almost hatched eggs.
Me too, and I thought that was a cool idea. I wonder how that would work?
Same
I also thought the plan was to put an egg just starting to be cracked.
I’ve actually had great success by putting newly hatched goslings right out in the open where adult geese can easily see them, like right near their primary food source. You must A) provide goslings with warmth and food/water and B) keep goslings physically separated from adults with temporary fencing, like poultry netting. Within a few hours, inevitably one or more adult geese refuse to leave the goslings and will set up camp right next to them. By late afternoon, I cautiously pen all of them up TOGETHER. You must still provide babies with warmth as they will not instinctively crawl underneath an adult. But living in Texas, by March or April, this is usually not a major problem. By the following morning, the adoptive parents will protect those babies tooth and claw. Have done this on three or four separate occasions, always with great success. The trick is allowing the entire flock to have an opportunity to adopt. Nesting moms are not receptive without extreme trickery. But other adults (ganders, too!) are quite protective of their own kind.
This is cool
I agree! I’ve had ganders take up raising goslings.
These are super helpful tips! Thank you!
I did something like that with chickens.
Last year I had a hen that wanted to be a mother. Unfortunately her two chicks died within 24 hours. She had a breakdown (really, acted mad, crushed against the window, scared even the rooster)
I had hatched some chicks in an incubator. They were allready two weeks old, but I tried anyway. Set up a cage and let the adult chicken decide if they wanted them.
That mother hen adopted them the very second she saw them. Would sit next to their cage all day long, showing them food and talking to them. The chicks needed some time to understand her, but after two to three days, they were inseparable. Perfect match. The rest of the flock accepted them as mother hen's chicks.
"The only man who never makes any mistakes is the man who never does anything." T.R. A peace!
The man who makes no mistakes is God
@@GohantheTurtle rofl pwnage
More like Chuck Norris
@@GohantheTurtle then why did God make me?
Jk
@@GohantheTurtle Not sure God is a 'man'.
@@GohantheTurtle not god but angels
"Welcome to the world baby goose"
SMACK!
That little gosling learned what life is all about and survived on day 0.3. That's a Goose to keep.
Mother Goose (oh, a new chick). Hissss. Hissss. (I'm planning on teaching you to hiss)
Tractor Supply are rubbing their hands at this one 😂
Whew, that was close one for the little yellow puffball. Glad it's doing okay.
LISTEN, you do an AMAZING JOB with your animals Morgan! I know you tend to listen to others more often than you don't. Just keep doing you! You are an awesome, caring individual. Your love for your animals shows and your animal husbandry is on point. Just don't let them get to you. Listen to your heart. ~mushzilla~
"Failure is not the opposite of success- it is part of success". 🥰
Geese hiss because they are soft and hissy. It is the hissy part that gets you.
I love that you show both your successes and failures. There are a lot of both in homesteading.
I smuggled one little gosling in with my bonded pair. The male wanted a baby so bad that he was following the baby chics around. I pulled the mama out of the nest and put the baby in and they ran to the gosling, immediately accepting her.
I thought you were going to put the eggs under her not when they already hatched
eggs that were hatching probably would have been a better option.
I thought so too. Pipping eggs perhaps.
Me too, or at least removing the mothers from the nest and then sneaking in some goslings before it comes back so it thinks it hatched its own.
Yeah, Ihavethe very same question. Why hatchlings and not the eggs?
@@Tanks_In_Space you will be very surprised. We tried this same method on chickens but during the day. It doesn’t work by that was the first thing that came to mind.
The duck faceplanting on the ramp was a welcome moment of levity in this video. I feel a little bit bad, but I laugh every time they do that.
The one that stayed in the incubator is probably feeling pretty lucky right now.
Now I finally get why Toby dog looks so "relieved" to see you every morning.. no stinging feeling when marking territory!
I actually was relieved when I noticed he had turned off the power. lol - poor Toby - can't imagine the "shock" !!
@@deannamunro8148 It's only the top wire running around the fence that's electrified - Pablo is the only one who can reach the electrified part!
@@Berkeloid0 lol - good thing!
Announces he is going to smuggle the chicks under the gooses...
Proceeds to bring the box right infront of her and hands the chicks to her...
Clearly, he needs to learn how to be a better smuggler
"I'll bring you guys along with me for the ride, and see what happens."
*Nervously looks at the title.*
my only problem is that instead of allowing yourself to get a bite from the goose you allowed the baby goose to get hit multiple times to the point of it giving up, i understand that mistakes happen and that you couldnt have stopped her from her natural instincts but you shouldve taken a bite on the gloved hand
Thank you for keeping it honest and real and showing both the ups and downs, that takes a lot of strength to show what actually happens on a real farm
Was all for show unfortunately 😕 definitely could of gotten in the way. Still love the farm tho.
I feel like this year was an extraordinarily cold spring that really messed with the goose’s ability to hatch eggs naturally, which might make interpreting your results from this year’s approach kind of hard
I would give it another try in the next season, too.
Trail and error. Positive self talk is also important as a farmer! You're gonna be okay and your choices have helped you know how to succeed in the future. We love you💗
Admittedly I know nothing about raising geese, but are you letting them have a little too much power over certain aspects of the farm? They seem to be really arrogant creatures, like if you give them an inch they just say "screw you" and take the whole ruler!!
or the whole doghouse!
Geese are the white collars of the poultry yard. Chickens are the laborers and ducks are the middle class.
You really called a damn bird arrogant 😭😭
@@khalea1651 Well, they are, no?
@@khalea1651 in a comical way! Chill!
woah such bravery on posting this video
You were there to pull the plug when needed and we know you care deeply about all the birds and critters on the farm. Looks like that mom knew her babies were about to hatch and there was no room at the Inn.
Appreciate your honesty and I respect you for it, as well as for all your kindnesses in working to ensure the best life for your animals. Curious for confirmation that the baby gosling with the 2 Mommas was one of their own??? And very glad the gosling recovered!!
Me: Save the baby! Save the baby! I was yelling at my tablet 😂🤣
I appreciate that you showed this and I'm glad the baby is ok.
Thank you for showing us that ugly part. A lot of people would never show something like that, you made a mistake and learnt from it. Showing this proves how humble and true you are.
When the smacked gosling stopped kicking and struggling and just gave up... 😭😭😭
So glad it's okay now.
I've had success doing this in the middle of the night when it's pitch black outside. Farming is all about learning and weve all made mistakes. I appreciate you sharing the good and the bad.
My chickens are accepting of any babies.
My hens have hatched a lot of my ducklings and I've had them foster babies too.
Nothing wrong with a chicken raising a goose.
You have shown more empathy raising your flocks than most farmers I’ve known and seen. You have nothing to feel bad about. Keeping it real and honest, is why I have watched your videos from the very beginning.
Hey, Morgan!
As always, I truly appreciate your transparency with your content, it's so refreshing and real. Everyone makes mistakes, even those responsible for taking care of animals, but you clearly want to and try to learn from your mistakes and aren't making these decisions with intention of harm or anything. Thus I commend you for showing us the good, the bad, and the ugly.
As for your low hatching rates, perhaps the issue is that one of your ganders is infertile, maybe one of the newer/younger ones considering that you had better hatching rates last year. Just some food for thought!
Keep up the good work and don't beat yourself up too much! You have fans here from all around the world cheering you on and learning with you!
Cheers from Ontario, Canada!
9:12 Duck was head over heels excited to start the day!
As a new homesteader it makes me feel better that even my favorite homesteaders can make mistakes sometimes too. Thanks for sharing and I'm so delighted that the little one is doing okay now and pulled through. Your humility and humor is what keeps me coming back. Please never change
Your honesty is appreciated! Perhaps this warning will help others better decide whether or not to take this type of risk. I hope you get fair criticism instead of hate.
Putting almost-hatched eggs under the mother goose might be better than an actual gosling that she had not been communicating with during incubation. Just a thought.
ONE OF THE EGGS I HATCHED FROM YOU IS A BRUCE GOOSE TOO!! Only 2 out of the 6 we got hatched, but I am so excited that one of them is a Bruce!!
That's awesome!!
💐🖐️💐
You shouldn't let mama goose take Toby's shed since the beginning, she is an invader of someone else's property.
That's why I'm angry. The "mother goose", whose not a mother, had plenty of time already,,,, get her out
3:57 smooth af transition. I must show my respect, Mr. Farmer Man.
I agree with other posts. Good intentions, but wrong approach. Should've switched soon-to-hatch eggs instead of goslings. Should also have moved the mother out first..
Too many people edit their videos and won't show things that may make them look less than "great". Thank you for showing us the good and the "bad". I'm sure you're not the only person to try something like that. Nature is nature and people can't attach human emotions to nature taking its course. Good job being real. 👍🏼
I thought you were going to put eggs that were close to hatching under the geese. Isn't that the best way? Wouldn't they think those were her eggs?
Mistakes are lessons to be learned! I stand by that, you are human and I feel your compassion
It's gonna be ok Morgan, you tried. I would have thought to take her eggs then give her the goslings
Thank you so much for keeping it honest and real. We learn best from our mistakes and if we are really lucky we learn from the mistakes of others and spare ourselves a certain failure, if we're smart and paid attention. I appreciate you sharing this misadventure and keeping those of us who might have attempted it in the future from making the same mistake.
Once again, I commend you for being willing to show us everything. Man, it's tough to watch sometimes but it is SO valuable to see the real side instead of the "produced" side. You're saving a whole bunch of other animals the stress and harm by letting a whole new generation of interested farmers learn through your mistakes.
Wow!! I have done the same only with chickens! They wanted to hatch their eggs but had no success. So i incubated some and then put them under mama hen! Thankfully she did adopted them! But we have to learn some how and sometimes it's so hard to watch!! So thank you for sharing your experience!! Stay safe!
Just a thought, considering the high number of eggs that didn't hatch, could some of your ganders be shooting blanks?
I love when you take us along for the ride! I’m 70 years old and I’ve never seen eggs hatch!
I can hear Tosh's voice, "That's a bad mamma"
Glad to hear that the gosling survived
I love your compassion and also love your egg smuggling
We had a very similar thing happen at a local pond area near us, where a woman had released 9 ducklings into the pond where there were other ducks and their ducklings. We knew she meant well, but the first thing that happened was one of the mothers with her preexisting ducklings went on a killing frenzy. A local wildlife rescue was called, but by then it was too late. The pond was full of floating duckling corpses, only 3 survived to be caught. The rescue centre ended up putting a plea out begging people to never just release ducklings and hope for the best, and to instead just take them straight to a rescue, regardless of if they were raised by people or otherwise (a lot of people hatch for the sake of it and then don't actually want to deal with the older birds, so they release them - which is basically a death sentence). It was eventually come forward that the woman who released them had caught the ducklings by a busy road and that the parents had flown off, so she just assumed they'd be on the pond nearby, which proved to be a big mistake.
While I'm not pleased you did this experiment, especially having known that waterfowl don't just foster other babies (see: your past video on trying to get a duck to foster ducklings, and she ended up both scared of the group, and would attack them), I'm glad you're at least aware of it being wrong. Though the fact this is your second attempt trying it worries me for the future. Please don't do it again.
I had a similar problem this year with my chickens, lots of broody mammas that we couldn't break up. We had one nest attacked and the eggs/ newly hatched chicks were killed. The others were sitting on duck eggs. We only had one successful hatch, but they were transplants from my own incubator as well. We were hatching turkeys in the house and after the first two hatched I took some out to one of our momma birds that I truthfully didn't think were going to make it as they were already passed their hatch date. She hatched both but one had issues with its yolk and expired but the other is doing great and she recently brought it back to the main flock. All that being said, my best advice would have been to take eggs that are ready to hatch, distract the mom and swap in the good eggs. That seems to work the best and she gets the sense that she did the all the work too. IDK, giving momma birds already hatched babies rarely seems to go well but at least it looked like one of her eggs hatched in the end. Thank you for being honest with us and thankfully that little one was okay.
I'm learning a lot from your posts , its great that you tried something in a way that helped us learn more about your farm , you are a very caring person , I'm glad the little guy is ok.
Dang, city boy. I thought you were gonna swap out the eggs with near-hatching ones, not stick a bunch of random goslings in a defensive gooses face.
So instead of encouraging someone who is trying to learn, you call them names and make them feel bad? That's a great way to stop people from trying anything new, well done.
@@vink6163 yeah, he nearly got a gosling killed being dumb. Trying to learn doesn't excuse trying anything.
@@SuperMrgentleman That wasn't my point. My point was if someone does something wrong, you explain to them the right way so they learn. If you just call them names and don't explain the correct way to do something, that person won't learn anything from your comment and might repeat the same mistake so that doesn't help anyone.
Thank you so much for being so true and open about your life and work on the farm! I already watched so many of your video’s and learned so much! It has given me a great desire to start my own homestead!
I can only imagine how bad it must feel having that little one get beat up like that. You can't predict what will happen. Was it a mistake? Yes. But you learned from it. Over all you are still a budding, learning farmer as you have said yourself. You dont have a long family history of this to learn from. And sometimes learning on the job can be heart breaking. You do more for your baby birds than most farmers who would just leave weak ones to die and not bother trying to help them. I am glad that the little one that got hit rebounded!
Honestly if you wanted to do a hybrid approach I think the only way you can get away with it is to put actual eggs that are in the process of hatching under them so that the mothers think it's their egg. So shoo the mother off, sneak the eggs, ect. But that run the risk of you can't help if there are hatching trouble so it's up to you if you want to take that risk.
The mother goose was hissing like an angry cat telling you she is rejecting those baby geeses. It was not a good idea when she hisses like that.
i would have stuck a hatching egg under the goose, not a hatchling.
also, get some gloves thats let the geese bite you.
Toby is so hapy whenever there is a new animal on the farm
That is some harry potter vibe music! Eggspecto Goosetronum
A pun as butchered as Morgan’s attempt in this video
@@_aworldthatspoke950 what did you eggspect
eggactly
That most decidedly was not all your fault, Morgan. You are a good and conscientious man. Shit happens! Especially in nature. You’re very transparent in sharing that with us. Good luck! You’re a good farm daddy.
Even taking the pinned comment into account you most definitely could have saved the gosling earlier and it’s injuries could have been avoided altogether. Still like the channel but that was a pretty big whoopsies
All new or newish farmers make mistakes.
Nah, he had to get those camera angles.
Glad to see that the little one survived, thought it had it's neck snapped or something similar, despite the failure great job on pulling the plug when you did! Goodluck to the mommas and the babies growing
*@Gold Shaw Farm*
2:17 Can't you add some extra support in the middle of that ramp? Some boulders or something? Or some extra wood support?
It seams to be too steep in the beginning, because most of the ramp lies flat on the ground.
From cute little Goslings to Velociraptors LOL
Only try giving babies at night when it is dark. I've had 100% success giving broody chickens purchased chicks, keets, etc. Never tried giving babies to geese or ducks. But when I switched out the fertile eggs you sent me with the unfertilized eggs under the goose, I did it at night. You want sleepy birds.
Built On the Rock Homestead - From Morgan's pinned comment: "When it comes to geese and ducks, the answer is not nearly as conclusive. They don't sleep the same way nor exhibit the same behaviors. In fact, I have found geese to be much more vigilant and aggressive at night when compared to the early morning. Based on the research I did, plus what I have observed with goose behavior here on our farm over the past couple of years, I didn't think the time would matter much."
@@wendyweaver8749 interesting. My geese are more aggressive during the day, and my Pilgrim geese came from Morgan. During the night they appear to flee from danger.
Don’t beat yourself up! Each new attempt is another lesson learned. Not the end of the world! ❣️
When you explained in the video what you were going to do, it sounded like an interesting idea, BUT what I understood was that you were putting the EGGS about to hatch. Not the goslings.....
For sure the goslings would be attacked by the protective geese. They are not like some chicken, and there is a reason geese are this aggressive and protective....When animals are worked up they don't see the difference between friend and foe and anything becomes a target.
It was a very naive mistake, but glad u learned from it.
Love how Toby bows before you let him out. Lol
A true gentle men
And a very good boi
@@raptorfae.6645 HESSUCHGOODBOIII. 🍖
Thanks for uploading~ I feel you on the part of wanting to try to see if they’ll adopt. Sometimes it’s just all about trying and finding out what works and what doesn’t. Also, who knows perhaps future farm owners may find your videos and learn from it 😄 Happy that the little one was okay at the end! 😍
I volunteered with a wildlife rescue and the way you introduce baby goslings is you make sure the goose has some of their own young ones of the same age following them away from the nest and introduce them with the other babies. It does not work while they are still nesting, only while they are already following the mom.
The Kazuo music at the end, was spot on!
Precious sweet baby gooslings they are really smart being well taken care of
Only comment I have is a goose bite doesn’t hurt much you need to brave it up a bit more bud . Even a scratch from the claws might sting but your a big man I’m sure you can handle a scratch or two …lol
Definitely agree with this! The pain is all because of fear. Once you accept that it doesn't hurt that much then it hurts even less because most of the pain is just in your mind because you're afraid it will hurt. They've done studies that show that being afraid of the thing that will hurt you amplifies the pain. Also, don't try to rip your hand away so fast because that's when their 'teeth' cut your skin, if they bite you just leave your hand where it is until they let go, it will hurt even less again.
glad Pablo got a cameo at the beginning of the video
Ok Release the crackens, It never gets old
isnt it 'Quacken'?
There was a video in which he purposely did not say that and the ducks were confused. I can't seem to recall which one it was. Too many to look through..
Thank you so much for sharing your experiences. Learning curves are just that Learning curves. What doesn't work one time might work the next and vice versa.
Just thought of something for Toby’s doghouse opening to keep geese out. Wonder if a doggie door flap could be secured to the top of the opening and then teach Toby how to use it by putting tasty food inside. Just a thought lol.
Right. A door only Toby can get through. But first the goose had got to be removed
I appreciate your effort, and I am glad that you decided to share this with us. That said, I've had better luck with placing about to hatch eggs in front of a goose and letting her roll the egg under herself. Then she feels the egg hatch and is more likely to adopt the chick.
Oof, that was hard to watch, I had to pause the video several time when I saw this baby gosling being flipped over defenseless, waving its tiny legs and getting hit by the mama goose.. 😭
Thankfully you stopped it in time, but I was very scared since it wasn’t moving in the box afterward, I thought it was injured or dead..
That’s a hard lesson learned, but a lesson nonetheless, so thank you for posting this video, and have a good day :)
Phew! Happy to see the little one doing well. That was a tense video! We all have to learn the hard side of things. Some more obvious errors than others when you end up hating yorself, but even so none of us relative newbie farmers are perfect and we all make mistakes that we know we will never repeat. Take care and phew, big sigh of relief with the end bit!
If that baby goose dies im rioting
You have to somehow put the babies under her without her seeing you doing it. I think most people will be upset because they think you should know everything and most people learn from there mistakes and just don't show it. So thanks for being real on your channel. Maybe ask next time before you try something so people that do have knowledge can give you some ideas before you try it. Anyone that has watched you for very long knows that you would never try to hurt any animals you have a big heart and a kind soul that is why I enjoy your channel you take great care of all of your animal's. You do a great job Morgan keep up the great content you have on your channel.
10:00 back to their usual ying and yang formation
If you had such a low hatching rate not only with the incubator but also with the four mother's, could it be that your ganders aren't doing their job well enough or aren't fertile? Do you need to introduce a few new male?
I have seen others successfully do this with live babies. Maybe if you have two people: one to distract the mom and one to sneak the babies under her without her seeing you do it?
I think that's the key - random chicks wandering around could come from any other mother in the flock, but one that appears under you is definitely yours.
"Goose uncle" is so funny!
At what point do you drop the camera and rescue the gosling!
About 20 seconds into it going south
9:13 practicing parkour I see, lil' duck. You're gonna go far, kiddo!
I love how Toby Dog always comes to you when you come out to the pen, how remarkable this dog is
No hate, no ugly comments from me and appreciate the warning. It was worth a try, another channel had a female goose adopt a group of hatchlings that were running around and took on mom role. What I do know is that raising critters and farm life is not glamorous and often ugly. What I also know is that you tend to research everything so you aren't being stupid or careless and have a heart of gold when it comes to being a good steward you are top of list. I love your videos
Oh wow! I was holding my breath when you were trying to get the babies back in the box. So glad they’re all ok. Ya know, I’d try not to be so hard on yourself Morgan. You not a noob. You’re trying your best every day for the success of your animals and your farm. It’s ok!! 💜
Thank you for letting me know the babies were ok. I didn't watch incase they had been killed by the mother goose after reading the title. That's a relief. I'm not a farmer but do watch Morgan's channel.
You had a lot of courage showing this one, I give you tremendous credit for that. When you were getting ready to set down the babies, I was screaming "NO!". I have to admit, I got very mad and upset, and was relieved when you admitted it was a dumb thing to do. I really do enjoy your uploads, please keep it up and best of luck to you and the success of your farm.