Pinioned Cygnets

Home Page Forums Ask a Swan Specialist Pinioned Cygnets

  • This topic has 3 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 1 year ago by .
Viewing 4 posts - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #13832 Reply
    Donna
    Guest

    What will the parent swans do to pinioned cygnets?

    #13866 Reply
    Swan Expert
    Keymaster

    Hi Donna

    The parents will show no negative behavior toward pinioned cygnets. Because pinioning should be conducted at 1-3 weeks of age by a licensed veterinarian, the procedure should be completed in a timely manner so that the cygnets are returned to the parents within 1-2 hours. The longer the cygnets are separated from the parents, the greater probability for rejection by the parents. There are wo possible methods to prevent rejection by the parents. One is to take the female swan to the veterinarian’s facility with the cygnets so the young birds are within sight of the parent. Second, is to have the veterinarian come to your site and have the cygnets pinioned and immediately returned to the parents once the procedure is completed and no bleeding is observed. The Regal Swan

    #18999 Reply
    Andy Andreson
    Guest

    I hatched 2 baby black swans,I bought a pair of adult swans and eggs my question is when is I safe to release them ( babies ) into one pond with the adults ?
    Thank you very much

    #19643 Reply
    Swan Expert
    Keymaster

    Hi Andy:

    If you hatched the cygnets without the parents, the adult swans may not accept the cygnets and try to harm them.

    If the cygnets have been kept with the parents from the time of hatching, then their should be no problem with the parents accepting the cygnets. The cygnets should be kept with the parents from day one.

    Once all eggs are hatched, realistically, all cygnets can be released onto the pond after 24 hours from the last hatching. Within 24 hours of hatching, the mother swan will take the young cygnets onto the pond. This is the realistic timing. However, if you should have many predators, i.e., snapping turtles, egrets, herons, large mouth fish, owls, hawks, and other predators, you may want to keep the cygnets and the parents in a secure pen. Now, having said this, even though you are protecting the swans from predators, you may be increasing the possibility that the family could be susceptible to injuries and disease while penned. So, you have to weigh these factors, but the best may be to release them onto the pond and let nature takes its course. The cygnets must learn from their parents the basics of survival and how to be a swan. The Regal Swan

Viewing 4 posts - 1 through 4 (of 4 total)
Reply To: Reply #18999 in Pinioned Cygnets
Your information: