Call Duck Eggs

Call Duck Eggs
Limit 2 dozen per order. Bonus Eggs with Dozen order!
Call Duck Eggs - Colorful Variety is the Only Option.
** They ship mid-March - mid-May Only / this guarantees the highest fertility rates! pre-order if you’re interested - They do typically start to lay in February. A big batch of eggs are saved for incubating - fertility tested - before eggs are shared with customers.
A variety of colors. Sorry we do not only offer white! We have white, blue bibbed, black bibbed, silver, chocolate, along with some really colorful mixes!
Call Ducks are the smallest domestic ducks, and the noisiest! Their lifespan is 6-10 years. They are raised for pets, ornamental, and exhibition. They are tolerant to all climates. They’re loud, chatty, have good temperaments, active, animated, and good with kids. They come in many colors - the standards are Apricot, Bibbed, Black, Blue, Fawn, Mag pie, Mallard, Pied, Silver and Whites. They are 1-2 lbs! They don’t lay too many eggs a season, 50 but they make up for it with how cute they are.
Hatching Suggestions - They are on a slight different hatch schedule than other duck breeds.
It’s safe to suggest 30-35 humidity for the first 24 days. (I have personally had success with 50 percent humidity - the room the incubators are in are 25 percent humidity). At the end of day 24 - put eggs into lockdown and up the humidity to 60-70 for last days-of-hatch. Never 80 or risk drowning. I would suggest joining a call duck hatching group on Facebook - and watching some YouTube videos. I do start misting with water - once a day - beginning on day 10. They typically hatch day 27-29 - and it’s not unusual for them to need assistance - which requires hatch experience! One thing I do - I air the incubator for 5-10 minutes every morning once they’re misted which resembles the mother getting off the nest. I do send along some hatching instructions in the box.
Customers have had success hatching in the nurture right 360. I think it’s best to lay the eggs down - instead of air cell up (opposite of what I suggest for shipped chicken eggs). There’s a learning curve - hatching call ducks! If you’ve hatched all sorts of other breeds - it’s different - and worth the risk 💕