Ten duck carcasses, five from each of two different flocks, and four pairs of pooled duck caecal contents, each pair from a separate flock, were examined by a variety of techniques for arcobacters and campylobacters. Campylobacter coli, C. jejuni ssp. jejuni, C. upsaliensis, Arcobacter cryaerophilus and A. butzleri were isolated from duck caecal contents. Campylobacter coli, C. jejuni ssp. jejuni, A. cryaerophilus, A. butzleri and A. skirrowii were isolated from carcasses. The most effective methods for isolating these bacteria from carcasses involved selective enrichment in campylobacter enrichment broth, containing a cefoperazone, amphotericin, teicoplanin supplement, followed by plating onto modified charcoal cefoperazone deoxycholate agar (mCCDA), or plating onto non‐selective blood agar after filtration through a 0·65 μm pore size cellulose acetate filter. In contrast, recovery from caecal contents was most effective by direct plating onto mCCDA. API test strips performed poorly, failing to identify A. skirrowii or A. butzleri (which are not included in the scheme), or even many common campylobacters. The Preston biochemical characterization scheme was more helpful, though it did not distinguish between Arcobacter species. The species of most isolates of campylobacter, identified using the Preston scheme, was confirmed by the use of SDS‐PAGE of whole cell proteins and this technique was also used successfully to speciate arcobacters.