Guest guest Posted May 26, 2009 Report Share Posted May 26, 2009 These females look just like the greylag geese. When we were kids, I believe we had a pair of these, but I didn't know what they were called! There are five greylags that wander between three pastures where my horses live. They will duck under the bottom fence rail, which is about 18 inches off the ground, or they will fly over the fence, which is about 5 feet tall. Have fun with these guys! Kathy ---- haecklers <haecklers@...> wrote: ============= We got some geese for the first time this spring - a pair of Pilgrim geese. Pilgrims are among the nicest of geese - friendly and not too aggressive (some others have been known to attack people). They're on the small side for domestic geese. They are color-coded - males are white and females are lovely shades of grey. Some sources say they are good parents and will raise two clutches of eggs a year, others that they aren't, so maybe it depends on where you get them from. Here's the neat part - they can live on just grass all summer. Ours turn their noses up (beaks up?) on the feed we put out for the hens but have grown at a phenominal rate. My friend who raises mixed poultry said of the chickens, guineas, ducks, and turkeys she's raised, she liked the goose meat the best. I've never had it, because I've never seen it for sale. It takes re-education of the consumer to not shy away from " greasy " meats. I plan to use my Confit recipe from the book " Charcuterie " on our goose meat - you use the fat to enhance the meat, first brining it for flavor, then cooking it submerged in fat/grease at a low temperature for a long time - 250 for 8 hours I believe. I've had duck confit in a restaurant and it was the best thing I've ever eaten in my life, so I can't wait. The fat can be saved to make another confit (like with a chicken) or it can be used in cooking, I hear it's excellent for frying potatoes. The poops are a problem, as is the close grazing. I'm going to keep an eye on what happens with our lawn about this. So far the grass, even where they like to graze the best and keep it very short, seems green and healthy. I'm wondering if the rich poop makes up for the intensive grazing. The geese seem to go preferentially for various weeds, like the canadian thistle I have in the ex-garden. They DO love clover, tho. The poop doesn't seem to be burning the grass at all, tho I tried watering the garden with their swimming water and it killed my kale, peppers and collards. I made a goose fence to keep them off the deck out of clothes line and bungee cords I got at the dollar store for a total of $3. They hate to duck their heads to go places, so the " fence " is just two strings of the clothes line running across the deck, held on with bungee cords on one side (so if someone trips they don't get hurt). The bungee cords also maintain the tension so it doesn't sag. I ran another string up and down from the top to the bottom to make it more visible - top string is about 14 " from the ground and the bottom one is around 4 " from the ground. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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