Please print out and distribute “Are All Your Ducks In a Row? Did You Know?” to libraries and elsewhere, including shopping centers and retailers like Tractor Supply, where baby animals are sold at Easter.
Those not sold are trashed. There is nothing cute, cuddly or kind about the business of “Easter” ducklings, chicks, rabbits, and baby geese.
Each year, parents and others buy ducklings, baby chicks, rabbits, and
goslings on impulse for Easter. Most of these animals are discarded once the
charm of “oh, how cute” wears off. Often they are purchased as gifts for
friends who never asked for them. Most people have no idea how to care for
these fragile creatures, and few if any buyers spend money on veterinary
care. Millions are dumped in the woods or near water, where they will not
survive. Many are already sick, lame, malnourished, and dehydrated by the
time they reach the store.
Bill Crain, cofounder of
Safe Haven Farm Sanctuary in New York, writes this
year:
March is coming and stores will be selling ducklings. Last spring, our farm
sanctuary received an average of two or three calls a day from people who
purchased ducklings but discovered they require more care than anticipated.
We tried to tell them that people need to demonstrate responsibility for the
animals they adopt. On occasion, the caller listened, but most did not
listen.
When we told one man that his continued care for his ducklings, despite the
trouble, would be a good model for his children, he changed his mind and
said he would keep them. But the overwhelming majority of callers say it’s
too difficult.
Most of the ducklings are white Pekin ducks. The largest single seller in
our area is Tractor Supply. Other feed stores sell them, too. People also
order them online.
Some people just dump the unwanted ducks in parks or along roadsides. We get
calls from people who see them wandering about, desperately trying to
survive.
The problem extends beyond ducks and includes chickens. Tractor Supply and
other commercial enterprises sell many chicks in batches that usually
include roosters most people cannot keep. But last spring, ducks were the
largest species in our area that people didn't want. The problem was much
greater than in previous years. It was a crisis, and I fear it will continue
to be one.
– Bill Crain, February 2021
What Can I Do?
Please print out and distribute
“Are All Your Ducks In a Row?
Did You Know?” to libraries and elsewhere, including shopping centers
and retailers like Tractor Supply, where baby animals are sold at Easter.
Those not sold are trashed. There is nothing cute, cuddly or kind about the
business of “Easter” ducklings, chicks, rabbits, and baby geese.
AND...
Urge Tractor Supply and other farm stores that sell these baby animals to stop. They are knowingly contributing to the suffering and death of countless creatures. They do not even provide proper care for them in their own stores. Like the customers they sell to, most store employees do not know, for example, that motherless baby animals need dark, quiet places to shelter in, and that being subjected to constant light and noise causes them great suffering and weakens their immune systems.
Contact:
Hal Lawton, CEO
Tractor Supply
5401 Virginia Way
Brentwood, TN 37027
Phone: (615) 440-4600
Website:
www.tractorsupply.com
Customer Solutions:
1-(877) 718-6750
[email protected]
Thank you for everything you do for animals!
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