Pet Canadian goose.

/ Pet Canadian goose. #2  
A fellower worker mentioned that his good friend who lives on the next road to me has a pened deer .
Under Ontario Law you can not keep wild life such as White Tailed Deer.
He is in a deer run and found a young sick deer at his side door. They nursed it back.
He has a letter from the Ontario Goverment stating that he may keep the deer because of the conditions of its health it can not be returned to the wild.

Craig Clayton
 
/ Pet Canadian goose.
  • Thread Starter
#3  
There is a guy not to far from our place. He has a bunch of deer that are semi-pets. They live wild but come to get treats when he calls them. Then he pens few trophy bucks during hunting season.
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #4  
Getting to know nature/wildlife indeed can be rewarding,its a shame the ones who fear or wish not to understand causes the most problems.
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #5  
We had a pet wild turkey for about 3 years. She followed me back to the house one day when I was clearing out a fenceline. She used to go in my barn and stayed with my horses. She was very friendly, but she started coming around less often, and she took up with a group of wild turkeys that came to the feeder every day. We call her Miss Elly, after the Beverly Hillbillies charecter.
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #6  
i dont know.....if a car was coming in the other direction, someone would be having Christmas goose for dinner:laughing:
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #7  
Friend of mine found this goose on his property looking pretty sick. He gave it some water and started feeding it. After it got healthy it followed him everywhere he went or drove.
pet_goose.MOV - YouTube

Pretty neat, kind of like the movie "Fly Away Home" based on a true story. The actual guy that started the migration idea in the movie has successfully taught several different species their historic migration routes using a Ultra-light.

Movie info:
Fly Away Home - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Actual guy:
http://www.williamlishman.com/flight_with_birds.htm

Whooping Crane Reintroduction - Operation Migration -
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #8  
To Western
You mentioned Lishman and the Canadian Geese ( here comes the joke ).
As the Goose flies the Purple Hill site is about 20 minutes driving time South East from where I live.
I learned more on TV than I heard on the local grape vine.

Craig Clayton
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #9  
To Western
You mentioned Lishman and the Canadian Geese ( here comes the joke ).
As the Goose flies the Purple Hill site is about 20 minutes driving time South East from where I live.
I learned more on TV than I heard on the local grape vine.

Craig Clayton

Right!! Fascinating story to be kept "under wraps" too. I wonder if with less technology like the "net", if you would have heard about it around the local pubs or coffee shops? Seems like local info is harder to come by, or maybe with the Internet we have become somewhat less connected?

BTW, The movie is a suburb family/grandkids show
 
/ Pet Canadian goose.
  • Thread Starter
#10  
Right!! Fascinating story to be kept "under wraps" too. I wonder if with less technology like the "net", if you would have heard about it around the local pubs or coffee shops? Seems like local info is harder to come by, or maybe with the Internet we have become somewhat less connected?

BTW, The movie is a suburb family/grandkids show

It is not the Internet. It is air conditioning what keeps us disconnected. In the old days people used to sit on a porch and talked to strangers on the sidewalk. New houses don't even have porch.
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #11  
We always have two or three broods of Canada geese on our marsh. They leave feathers and s**t all over in the spring. A couple of years ago one of the goslings had a broken leg that had healed but it walked on the equivalent of its knee on that side so it was much slower than the rest of the brood. We fed it and it followed me around for most of the summer whenever it saw me. Our Lab tended to ignore it even though he would chase the rest fo the brood. In the fall when the rest of the brood left it remained behind and we were afraid it could not fly and we would have to either protect it or have goose jerky. One day the Lab decided it was time to chase it and the goose finally flew after several aborted takeoffs and rough landings. In the end it joined up with a migratory flock on the marsh and went wherever nature took it.
I think that if they are not threatened, Canada's are quite tolerant of humans and in many cases can be downright ornery to get what they want. They are not my favourite bird but they are interesting to watch in parenting
Our country place has a wrap around porch and no air conditioning so we often sit out -- closest sidewalk however is about twenty miles away :eek:
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #12  
I think that if they are not threatened, Canada's are quite tolerant of humans and in many cases can be downright ornery to get what they want.

I had a ball roll into a bunch of resting Canadian Geese once. It was in the fairway and as I approaced them the gander came at me.:eek: There was no way he was going to let me get to my ball and the rest of the gaggle wasn't the least bit concerned. I decided to just drop another ball and my buddy said I had to take a stroke. I tried to claim an unmovable hazard, the gander sure wasn't going to leave, but he kept busting on me that I was cheating. I told him he should get them to move and I would play the ball :laughing:
 
/ Pet Canadian goose.
  • Thread Starter
#13  
We had few pairs of CGs on our pond for a while. Our dogs would chase anything what moved but they left the gees alone. Aparently they were taught a lesson.
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #14  
Geese make excellent watch dogs, if you can put up with their constant dropping of fecal matter. They are territorial and will alert you to anything or anyone coming onto your property. Drug dealers also have been known to incorporate them into their surveillance system.
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #15  
When I was a kid, we had a Muscovy duck as a pet. We lived in town and our house was on top of a bank that was about 6' high. The duck decided that it was a "guard duck" and would sit at the top of the slope and no one dared to come on the property.

Every once in a while a dog would see the duck and come charging at it. It didn't matter the size of the dog, after about 5 seconds of flapping and pecking the dog would be taking off with it's tail between it's legs.

Never saw the duck loose a fight!
 
/ Pet Canadian goose. #16  
I have thought about getting some geese, but found out that they poop 10 times an hour. That's once every 6 min. I have a couple of dogs, and they poop enough and I don't think the lawn needs any more fertilizer.
 
 
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