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Thanks for sharing your experience and view. I do think it’s hard to imagine for an outsider how our garden and surroundings are for chickens. And in what ways they have to coop with predators. I lost many chicks/chickens to (unknown) predators. Many more than to health problems.I had a bantam tribe free ranging in Catalonia along with Marans and crosses. They made a very solid and stable tribe. They took in one Marans cross when the Marans threw her out and Harold, the senior rooster made one very obvious invitation to another single hen a few years later. I liked them. I thought their social skills excellent. These were good foragers and more predator aware than the crosses in particular.
I don't know the cat and I don't know your chickens. What I do know broody mums don't care how big and scary you are and when they kick off it's something to see. They are fast. Faster than any rooster of the breeds we had. I did have some die defending their chicks. We had dogs, sheep, donkeys, muscovies and all sorts of predators. Mum was usually out with the chicks on the land on day two or three.
Niether you nor I can keep these creatures coming to harm.
You won't get free range benefits in your garden, it just isn't big enough. On the other hand the dangers are considerably less. I would let everyone out when you are there to supervise.
Last year I decided to keep future chicks inside when I can’t/don’t supervise. I haven’t retired and cant keep an eye on them very often and on top of that, I’m not the type of person who enjoys to sit outside in the cold like you do.
Last year I lost both Dutch pullets when I worked at home at our diner table (laptop) and did watch now and then. But I tend to forget the world around ne when working. I lost them probably to a predator in the municipality field with blackberries and high grasses behind our garden. The pullets were like Mow, didn’t stay with the rest of the flock (no rooster, not free ranging all day, so I can’t say tribe)
Our garden isn’t big, but not closed of with fences. When the chickens free range they go to the municipality's field and the neighbours gardens too. The green area of the municipality is an ecological zone. It has a well with a small stream in it. A very attractive area for wild life, and cats.
This new chick grows up very protected now. With 2 mama’s in a confined space of 6m2. It’s closed of from the main run, so the other 4 can free range a couple of hours each day. I thought it would be my best option with 4 neighbour cats and a few visiting cats once in a while too. I don’t trust any cat with chicks and dont even trust 2 strange cats very much with my small bantams.
The 2 visiting cats:


The neighbour cats are often in our garden. And two even come into the run. One to eat chick feed and one to hunt sparrows or to have a nap in the sand bath area.
The black cat with white socks is a nasty newcomer this year. On the other hand I haven’t seen the grey striped tom for quite a while. Hopefully he had a severe car crash

When I get home from our vacation next week, Tintin will be 4 weeks old and I do consider to let him free range with both mama’s at the end of the day to start with, see how they behave, and take one step at a time.
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Geese, yesterday at the start of a famous levada trail to the green waterfall on Madeira.
In between there where several tunnels.
The last meters to the endpoint.