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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Duck houses  



1.1  Installation and maintenance  





1.2  Media reference  







2 See also  





3 References  





4 External links  














Duck pond






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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this articlebyadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Duck pond" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR
(April 2023) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
A duck pond in the Queen Elizabeth Park

Aduck pond or duckpond is a pond for ducks and other waterfowl. Duck ponds provide habitats for waterfowl and other birds, who use the water to bathe in and drink.

Typically, such ponds are round, oval or kidney-shaped.[citation needed] An example is the lily pond in the University ParksatOxford in England, constructed in 1925. Often, as in public parks, such ponds are artificial and ornamental in design. Sometimes they may be less ornamental, as for example in a farmyard or flooded quarry. A small domestic version of the duck pond is at Knowle Farm in Derbyshire.[1]

A Duck pond and ducks in Howrah, West Bengal, India.

Some duck ponds are purposely built for duck hunting. These flight ponds are constructed by hunters and wildfowlers to attract ducks, such as mallard, teals, bufflehead and wigeon, at dawn and at dusk. The ponds have shallow edges to allow ducks to reach food on the bottom. Barley is often used to attract or hold the birds.

Duck houses[edit]

A duck house, duck canopy, or duck island, is an often floating structure onto or into which ducks can climb, offering protection from predators such as foxes. Some are simple wooden shelters on land, while others are on islands in duck ponds or lakes; they can be quite ornate and/or large structures. A rather famous example can be found at Woodway HouseinDevon, England. A small domestic version of a duck house is at Knowle Farm in Derbyshire.[2] Such houses are also used for the birds to nest in a safe and convenient area. Dummy eggs, originally ceramic and now plastic, are used to encourage birds to lay in the duck house.

Installation and maintenance[edit]

They must be cleaned out about every month to prevent an unwanted and smelly buildup of fecal matter that is gradually left behind by the birds using it. They may also be prone to flooding during a storm if they are not raised adequately off the ground.

Media reference[edit]

Duck islands came to public prominence in the United Kingdom in May 2009, when a Member of Parliament claimed expenses to have one installed on his property. Sir Peter Viggers chose to stand down as an MP after he was shown to have attempted to pay for his duck island at the UK Parliament's, and hence UK taxpayers', expense.[3]

See also[edit]

  • Duck-baiting
  • Duck
  • The Big Duck building
  • Poultry
  • Water fountains
  • Woodway House
  • Hen house
  • Dog house
  • Pilling's Pond
  • Long Duck Pond
  • References[edit]

    1. ^ The Duck Pond. Duck Pond View.
  • ^ duckpondview.co.uk
  • ^ Allen, Nick (21 May 2009). "MPs' expenses: Sir Peter Viggers claimed for £1,600 floating duck island". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 26 November 2009.
  • External links[edit]

    Ponds, pools, and puddles

    Ponds

  • Balancing lake
  • Ballast pond
  • Beel
  • Cooling pond
  • Detention pond
  • Dew pond
  • Evaporation pond
  • Facultative lagoon
  • Garden pond
  • Ice pond
  • Immersion pond
  • Infiltration basin
  • Kettle pond
  • Log pond
  • Melt pond
  • Mill pond
  • Polishing pond
  • Raceway pond
  • Retention pond
  • Sag pond
  • Salt evaporation pond
  • Sediment pond
  • Settling pond
  • Solar pond
  • Stepwell
  • Stew pond
  • Tailings
  • Tarn
  • Waste pond
  • Waste stabilization pond
  • Pools

  • Brine pool
  • Infinity pool
  • Natural pool
  • Plunge pool
  • Reflecting pool
  • Spent fuel pool
  • Stream pool
  • Swimming pool
  • Tide pool
  • Vernal pool
  • Puddles

  • Coffee ring effect
  • Puddle
  • Puddles on a surface
  • Seep puddle
  • Biome

  • Duck pond
  • Fish pond
  • Goldfish pond
  • Koi pond
  • Ecosystems

  • Freshwater ecosystem
  • Lake ecosystem
  • Related

  • Bakki shower
  • Big fish–little pond
  • Body of water
  • Constructed wetland
  • Full pond
  • Hydric soil
  • Phytotelma
  • Pond of Abundance
  • Pond liner
  • Ponding
  • Puddle (M C Escher)
  • Spring
  • Swimming hole
  • Water aeration
  • Water garden
  • Water Lilies (Monet)
  • Well

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Duck_pond&oldid=1207784136"

    Categories: 
    Ducks in popular culture
    Ducks
    Garden features
    Ponds
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