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i am currently in a temporary council house awaiting work to finish on my own home i have two ducks and a drake at my own address but i need to move them as when the scaffold goes up i wont be able to get through to my yard to feed them can i bring them toi my council house, i dont want to ask the council as they have just made me get rid of my alsation puppy because my neighbour who doesnt like dogs (or single parents) kept complaining ( as peppy was in training to become my guard dog i am considering purchasing a goose which is an excellent guard and not a dog) i just want to know if anyone is familiar with this, also i am in a rural part of wales if this helps?

2006-07-12 11:35:35 · 15 answers · asked by 0000 3 in Home & Garden Other - Home & Garden

15 answers

hiya i had 2 ayelsbury ducks in my garden but the next doors kids said "we dont need alarm clocks anymore, we got your ducks." so i had to give them to a local farmer who loves em. im now a saturday dad to maverick and goose.
sayin that though mallards are a lot smaller so i sure you could get away with it, and say nowt to the b##ch next door about anythin she sounds a right cow. the scaffoldin wont be there for long.
good luck anyway.

2006-07-12 11:59:24 · answer #1 · answered by kenny 1 · 0 1

if temporary may get away with it, but sounds if neighbour will be a problem
lived on edge of Swansea in a council place before and my neighbour had to get rid of her ducks, which was a shame
geese are great as guard animals, wait til back at own place
but my mom had a duck that was pretty good too

2006-07-13 00:10:26 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It depends on how large the garden is and how near your neighbour is but most likely the answer is no.
You will need to place them somewhere else until your home is ready maybe a nearby farm or failing that an animal charity may be able to help with places

2006-07-12 11:42:48 · answer #3 · answered by madamspud169 5 · 0 0

Que?
How come you in council house if you have own home?
Please remember to breathe!
Yep, you must check with council before getting a goose. Otherwise you'll end up eating it.
Please.......... Why are you so paranoid about a guard dog??

2006-07-12 11:50:56 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Not sure about this one, I do know someone that is allowed to keep rabbits but they couldn't keep a cat or a dog. Just tell them your thinking of purchasing some ducks see what they say

2006-07-12 11:41:27 · answer #5 · answered by shadow2000 2 · 0 0

depends on how dictatorial your local council are, in my neck of the woods ne. lincs it's a no no;Suggest you contact your local council enviromental department, myself I think they will say no, geese can be worse than a dog! but you never know! good luck.

2006-07-12 11:44:28 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Yes of course you can Hilda Ogden had 3 Geese on her wall.

2006-07-12 11:40:11 · answer #7 · answered by rodmod 3 · 0 0

u can if you (a) want your neighbours to hate you (b) the local foxes and cats see them as steak or (c) Jamie Oliver could cook you a nice dinner for your neighbours with them and maybe they'll forgive you for the noise.

2006-07-12 12:04:17 · answer #8 · answered by Carl F 1 · 0 0

im afraid not.no livestock may be kept on council premises,even dogs and cats need written permission for you to keep them mike

2006-07-12 11:55:02 · answer #9 · answered by listener06y 3 · 0 0

ask your council as to their policy on it but if you have complaining neighbours you might struggle

2006-07-12 13:03:15 · answer #10 · answered by bbh 4 · 0 0

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