no because they have an oily substance on their feathers that keeps water from coming in so they stay warm and dry.
their fur
Warm
the front of an ice storm is a cold front
ducks are warmblooded
Ducks will come to it after a storm, and then your spouse will ask you if you want to keep them. :)
it doesn't stay i a storm. It is cold. in has no protection
it not cold most the time it only cold during the winter or in types of storm but mostly it warm.
lightning and cold 50% storm 50% sun add me as friend crazy john45
There are many combinations that will work, but my five favorites are cold and hail, cold and storm, hail and lightning, hail and storm, and lightning and storm. You have to start breeding the dragons between 7:00 p.m. and 7:00 a.m.
It's hard for them to find food and because the cold can kill them
How about a damaged hatch on a plane carrying a special cargo of frozen ducks which then escape out the hatch... Or on a more plausible note, freak strong upwards drafts resulting from strong storm cells are able to suck large objects up to altitudes higher than Mount Everest. This recently occurred to a German paraglider who was flying in NSW Australia. Miraculously, she lived to tell the tale - of partially awaking semi-frozen after reaching altitudes of nearly 30000 feet, while she was blacked out. Had she been accompanied by a flock of ducks at the time of being inhaled by the storm... could it be possible for frozen ducks to rain down from the sky on release from the storm? Or, some ducks are flying in the sky then get rained on then go to the north pole and accidentally freeze then die in flight again causing there to be frozen duckies!:-)
They don't form one, but they signal an oncoming cold front.