Posts Tagged ‘food’

Duck And Pigeon Food

Saturday, August 28th, 2010

Some cool duck food images:

Duck And Pigeon Food
duck food

Image by AndyRob
Duck And Pigeon Food

Chinese Roast Duck, Food Louver Grand Indonesia
duck food

Image by Herman Saksono
The succulent duck and its crispy skin is served with hainan rice and hoisin sauce

Duck And Pigeon Food
duck food

Image by AndyRob
Duck And Pigeon Food

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Experts fear long oil effect on marine life, food chain

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Experts dread long oil effect on marine life, food chain
Scientists studying the massive BP oil spill dread a decades-long, “cascading” effect on marine life that could lead to a shift in the overall biological network in the Gulf of Mexico.
Read more on AFP via Yahoo! News

LawNewsAmerica
In April 2008, a late spring snow flurry resulted in the diversion of ducks from their flyway to a tailings pond (“Aurora Pond”) near Fort McMurray, Alberta, operated by Syncrude Canada Ltd. (“Syncrude”). The ducks landed on the Aurora Pond and were killed by the toxicity of the pond.
Read more on Mondaq

Ducks halted
Tours have been suspended after two childish Hungarian tourists were killed last week with one body located near Pier 80 Friday. “Our thoughts and prayers are with our Philadelphia tour guests, crew members and their families. We are attending to their wants first. In the interim, we have… [This is a summary. To read the full article on SouthPhillyReview.com, click the headline above.]
Read more on South Philly Review

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Fast Food For Wildlife: Planting Fruit Trees, Berry Bushes, Grape Vines And Oaks

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

Much inhabitant attention has been focused on the health and prospect welfare of wildlife animals and birds by wildlife management conservationists and hunters who want to preserve a valuable American resource: the populace of wild animals and wild game. Increased planting of inedible crops like cotton and tobacco has reduced wildlife food supplies. Urban expansion has rapidly reduced forests where wildlife food once grew, and very efficient grain harvesting has left only a small corn or wheat in fields for wildlife food browsing.

Until recent years, the feeding of wild game animals and wildlife game birds was done by either letting the animals feed on the native plants and flora or by supplementing the food supply by planting strips of land with food plots of various annual grains each year. Some wildlife management academics not compulsory planting small fruit trees, berry plants, grape vines, and perennials to avoid the expensive problem of replanting annuals every year. These suggestions worked sometimes except for the fact that planting small oak trees often required 10 years or more of growing to produce the first food supply of acorns. Many small trees died the first year, because of the small root systems, and the stress of transplanting into a hostile neglected environment.

Planting large fruiting size trees for quick wildlife food sources has become very well loved, because of the high rate of livability and first year fruit production, such as with large mulberry trees, Japanese persimmon trees, and blueberry plants. Planting huge fruit trees of impact size appears to be an enthusiastic way to get wildlife food quicker and less expensively in the long run.

The United States government passed a law, the Pittman-Robertson Act in 1937, to protect wildlife resources that collects an excise tax of 11% of the cost to buy any firearms, guns, or bullets. This 11% excise tax is sent to the Department of Natural Resources of each Disorder to protect the wildlife habitat and food plots. Over two billion dollars of funding to preserve wildlife habitat has financed wildlife welfare since 1937.

Animals and birds can only live if their energy levels are met to grow, to escape predators, to reproduce, to survive long migrations, or to survive severe chill temperatures. Wildlife animals and birds must have shelter to protect them from terrible weather or to hide them from predators. Dense foliage and vegetation are the most common shelter retreats, but some animals burrow in holes in trees, logs, and in the ground or in log or rock piles.

Serious competition to wildlife for food and habitat can only lead to overcrowding that weakens wildlife resistance to disease and wild predators. Wildlife cannot survive except sufficient water, food, shelter, and space is available. Migratory animals go from one place to another in search of food, better climate, or other environmental factors. Chill food shortage is the most vital limiting factor for many wildlife species. Wildlife food plots of nut trees and fruit trees are termed, “hard mast.” The fruit trees include apple, persimmon, crabapple, pear, plum, and quince; nut trees include pecan, hickory, chinquapin, walnut, oak, and beech. Wildlife browsing for food is termed “soft mast,” include fruit and berry food from dogwood, viburnum, mulberry trees, elderberry, blueberry plants, muscadine and scuppernong grape vines, raspberry bushes, and blackberry bushes. To establish deer food plots, wildlife undergrowth, trees, and vines are best planted along fence lines on the dense edge of woods, bushy pond edges, or near plots of thick grass.

Burning off pine forests helps to provide high-quality forage and cover protection for deer herd management. Native plants will regrow to establish natural food plots for wildlife nourishment and health. Pine trees, hardwood trees such as beech and oak trees provide brilliant nest sites. Plants, vines, bushes, and undergrowth offer natural feeding plots for birds and wildlife that browse and eat the foliage, bark, shoots, new buds, foliage, twigs, fruit, grapes, seed, acorns, flowers, and berries.

Hunting plantation wildlife food managers plant and grow a combination of species to supply food plots for wildlife all year rather than only during the hunting season. Wildlife food plots are planted and grown in strips of annual grains such as corn, soybeans, wheat, alfalfa, sunflowers, clover sorghum, buckwheat, millet, and annual rye.

Corn seed is planted in food plots to attract deer, turkey, squirrel, raccoon, pheasant, and quail. Soybeans are game food for turkey, deer, pheasant, and quail. Wheat will attract Canada geese, doves, and turkey. Alfalfa attracts only deer; and sorghum plants offer limited shelter and food for deer, pheasant, quail, and duck. Sunflower seed are excellent food plots for deer, dove, goldfinch, and songbirds. Clover attracts only deer. Buckwheat grain is excellent game food for duck, turkey, waterfowl, pheasant, quail, and deer. Millet is an striking food plot grain for waterfowl and dove. Annual rye is an brilliant food plot grain for deer, Canada geese, turkey, dove, and rabbit. These wildlife food plots are best established near pine forests, pond edges, or near river bottom land where hardwood shade trees such as oak and beech nut trees grow.

These annual grain food plots are considered small term food sources for game birds, because the grain does not return to grow next year, and the process can be expensive and challenging to wildlife management farms and plantations. Some management for food plot growers prefer to plant seed of perennials, but often these efforts are complicated and only last a few years. Other management for establishing food plots prefer to plant small immature trees of fruit trees, grape vines, undergrowth and oak (acorn) trees of various sizes, but often fruiting is delayed for years except larger mature trees are planted.

Many managers of food plots plant tiny oak trees or undergrowth, but most oak trees require ten or more years to produce an acorn, even though more expensive, larger nursery grown trees produce fruit and acorns quick. Large crabapple, quince, mulberry, persimmon trees or blueberry bushes and muscadine grapevines will produce food for wild game animals and game birds after the first year, but small trees have small roots and tend to require many years for wildlife feeding purposes, and most small trees die the first year.

Berry bushes such as blueberry, blackberry and raspberry produce food early, and the thorny blackberry and raspberry bushes offer shelter and protection to game birds such as quail and pheasant. Chicasaw plum trees are a native plant to America and offer food promptly for wildlife and birds in the Spring, along with mulberry tree berries that ripen during turkey season. Late fall production of wildlife food is very desirable when most hunting seasons start. Nut trees such as hickory, walnut and pecan attract squirrels and game birds. Chinquapin nuts attract animals and game birds.

Wild game such as deer and bear can’t resist the aroma of ripening fruit in the fall, such as persimmon, apple, crabapple, pear and quince. Wildlife species have a sense of smell much more intense than humans, and some unethical hunters use picked apple or other fruit to apply the fruit fragrance on the ground near a deer stand, but this is illegal, just like baiting a dove field with cracked corn. It is advisable to plant and grow trees for this purpose, because it will attract game and wildlife for officially authorized hunting or viewing. Try planting mature trees, vines and bushes for wildlife feeding that requires no expense of yearly replanting or long waiting to produce a wildlife food fund.

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Duck food plants of the Illinois river valley

Friday, June 11th, 2010

 Duck food plants of the Illinois river valley

Duck food plants of the Illinois river valley

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These is What Holistic Pet Food Entails

Friday, June 4th, 2010

Holistic pet food offers natural and tasty food for your pets. The high grade ingredients used will help improve health levels of your pets. They contain quality meat meals, oil and grains. Most of the Holistic pet food includes variety of fresh fruits and vegetables.  They avoid any allergic ingredients.

Holistic pet food uses unique formula to provide protein rich diet to pets. They buy the ingredients from human grade suppliers. Chicken meal is produced from Chicken passed by USDA. Each and every ingredient used in Holistic pet food is carefully selected by experts to provide overall health improvement to your pets.

Holistic provide 7 dry food formula for dogs. Holistic chicken meal with rice is perfect for adult dogs. It includes easily digestible ingredients which will not cause diarrhea. It includes vitamins and minerals to provide a well balanced diet to the dogs. Holistic Duck meal and oat meal is very tasty and it is more suitable for dogs which have high allergic reactions. A single meal is enough for as long as adequate nutrition to the dog for the entire day. It includes anti oxidants and vitamin a, c and e. Beta carotene is also included in the product to enhance the immunity system of dogs.

Holistic sardine and salmon meal is preserved with natural ingredients only. This is a perfect meal for less active dogs. This will help managing weight control. Holistic lamb meal and rice is enhancing with red lamb, total auburn rice and oat meal. It contains taurine an essential amino acids for healthy eyes and heart.

Holistic canned foods are also available for dogs. This includes duck and oatmeal, duck and chicken meal, puppy chicken, beef formula with oat bran, chicken with oat bran and so on. Holistic dog biscuits are also available which contains wheat alternative ingredient. These biscuits contain essential fatty acids, vitamins and minerals. It also contains Omega 3 and 6 which will help as long as healthy skin and thick coat. These biscuits are easily digestible and they contain high nutritional value.  Chicken biscuits and Menhaden biscuits are also available in Holistic pet food range for your beloved pooch.

Holistic pet food for cats is also available in a wide variety. The canned food for cats will help improving the overall health of your frisky feline. You can use them as a mixer or can use as a complete diet. All these food products are safe and they contain standard ingredients. Duck and chicken formula, turkey and barley formula, Ocean fish and tuna formula etc are not only tasty but also increase the immunity of cats.

Holistic dry food formula that is available for cats is 100% safe for both kittens and adult cats. They are enriched with vitamins and minerals. They include omega 3 and fish meal oils. This will help to improve the bright in the skin and the thickness of the coat in cats. The natural ingredients like carrots, peas, alfalfa, blueberries and apples are included in the dry food formula. Cranberries are also included to help prevent urinary tract infections in cats.

Muna wa Wanjiru Has Been Researching and Reporting on Pet Food For Years. For More Information on Holistic Pet Food, Stay His Site at

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Orphaned Wild Mallard Ducklings waiting for Mazuri Duck Food 8/18/09

Friday, May 28th, 2010


This video was taken with a digital camera around August 18, 2009. These ducks and ducklings live in a sewer and the 70% of the ducklings don’t make it to the fledging stage. These orphans from 3 different clutches were borned between late June and first week of July. River otters had killed their moms when the ducklings were 2 to 4 weeks ancient. The seven (of twelve) orphan ducklings – about 6 weeks ancient — waiting for me to give them Mazuri duck food with key vitamins and minerals. Around 14 seconds into the video my favorite duckling stands in the water to get my attention s/he does this often. Public don’t know how quick ducklings grow — very nearly doubling their weight each week for 8 weeks. These ducklings have to eat to develop their feathers and their wings. Lastly, these are wild ducks so please don’t feed bread or other human food which can harm or kill these ducklings / ducks.

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What are some human food my muscovy duck can eat?

Friday, May 21st, 2010

I know bread is terrible for them

i fed him a hard boiled egg this morning and he LOVED IT!

What else can i fed

btw, hes a 5 month ancient

What do you think? Please comment below to tell me.
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Raising Geese As Watchdogs And For Food ? Some Pointers

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

White Geese are not naturally found in Africa.  It was most probable that they had originated years before, from the Embden goose. These geese were likely to have been brought with them by immigrants from Holland and Germany, the natural habitat of the Embden. 

 

The flight grazed in the orchard. The geese had no knobs on their bills and their height was no superior than the usual size for this breed.  They were fiercely protective of their territory – chasing, hissing, cackling and menacing everyone and anything that came too close.  They were the aggressors, anyone or anything that came into the periphery of their vision were liable to be attacked.  The dogs ignored them.  Adults, if they held their nerve, could catch them by their necks and intimidate them into backing off. There was only one die-hard gander who refused to be shaken by any form of backlash.  One couldn’t help admiring its spirit. Nevertheless, as a flight they were really annoying.  Children didn’t have much chance in avoiding their attacks and would end up life chased.

 

You could tell how ancient the mothers were by the ‘pouch’ which formed under their bellies.  The decrease it hung, the grown-up they were.  They make for tasty eating though their flesh tended to be very fatty which would clarify why a way of preserving the meat before refrigeration was to cook it in its own stout.  The cooled stout solidified and surrounded the meat and in this way it was able to be preserved.  The end product is called  ‘confit’ and is quite often regarded today as a delicacy.

 

Around 2500 BC it was found that their livers could be made to greatly increase in size – up to 10 times of the original size.  This was done by force feeding them, called ‘gavage’ – a mode which today is (and may have been in the past) quite an emotive issue. Moistened food is pushed down a funnel leading into a long tube which is inserted into the bird’s oesophagus.  The Egyptians used figs as the food, though pellets are more commonly used today.  Perhaps mercifully, the goose does not have a ‘gag’ facility.  The downside of which would be that their throats would suffer much harm.  The end result produced ‘pate de foie gras’ – goose liver pate to the uninitiated.  Apparently the liver has a sweet, rich flavour.

 

The fact that the goose is a migratory bird means that built in to its metabolism is the ability to place on weight rapidly within a small period of time.  Just before they migrate they are able to convert their food to stout very promptly.  This allows them to sustain their long flights to the more genial surroundings of their natural chill habitat.  It is this built-in mechanism that is used to produce the pate.  The geese are prepared by first feeding them on grass and then confining them until everlastingly they are force fed up to 4 times a day.  The total process may not take much more than 12 weeks.

 

Their watchdog characteristics are often used for just this purpose.  A positively well known account exists of them life used in around 300 AD when the Romans had been routed by the Gauls and they took safe haven on Capitoline Hill, a place simple to defend because of its elevation.  The Gauls besieged the city without success.  Then one night, under the cover of darkness, they scaled the hill to the bottom of the city parapet.  Fortunately for the Romans but, they did not factor in the geese that had been placed in cages on the wall to alert the Romans of just such an occurrence.  The cackling of the geese roused the Romans who repulsed the Gauls and saved the city.

 

The geese in the orchard used to place on a excellent show when they stood up on tiptoe flapping their wings and rushing off in whatever direction took their fancy.  It was pleasant to watch. They were copious breeders and were obviously greatly contented in the orchard.  They were also very excellent parents, the goslings changing from grey to white as they grew up.  Few predators attacked them.  During the day they roamed free, and at night were penned up.  To keep the facts consistent, the adults were sold, live, to public income locally.

 

In North America, the Canada Goose and the American Buff Goose are both successful reared by breeders.  Species like the Superior White-fronted Goose (Specklebelly), the Emperor, Ross’s Goose and the Cackling Goose are not found in as fantastic facts as before.  Some are in the decline because of hunting.  They are best viewed today on trips especially calculated for this, or by leisure paddling on your own or with friends. 

 

For more information about canoes, kayaks, boats and North American Geese stay:

 

 

 

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White Cap with pot, swimming, duck, food, bird

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

31BlQqI1i1L. SL160  White Cap with pot, swimming, duck, food, bird

Product Description
100% Polyester
* 5-panel cap
* Seamless Front Panel with Buckram Flap
* 4 Embroidered Eyelets
Matching Visor Color
* Pro Stitch on Crown
* 8 Rows Stitching on Visor
* Matching Fabric Undervisor
* Matching Color Sweatband
* Matching Fabric Adjustable Hook and Loop
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White Cap with pot, swimming, duck, food, bird

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Duck Food Show / ?????

Friday, April 30th, 2010


Streamed by Ted Chien. More at qik.com

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