If you have a garden and an orchard, you will need to be able to regulate your chicken's access to them, they can rototill a garden pretty darn quick and they do tear up any and nearly all decorative plantings. I let my chickens free range most of the summer, but keep the garden tightly fenced or there would not be a garden, just a nice dust bath place for my girls, they get in there, late fall, early spring.
I am on my third roo, each a different breed, thing is, you have to let them grow up, I really noticed a huge reduction in predator loss once my second, an EE roo got to be about a year old. This fall he was attacked so badly, that he lost all of his tail feathers, and then 5 or 6 weeks later, I lost him and a hen. My point is, this is tough country, and he made a big difference in predator loss during the daytime. I went from losing a hen about once a month, to not losing a hen for a full year. After I lost him, I could not let them free range at all, without losing something. I have something that has found an easy lunch, and my flock is in lock down.
I have a new roo, but he is young, hatched in June. We will see. It is the dead of winter up here, no bugs or other interesting things for chickens to get into, so with the predators and the lack of a mature roo, we will just stay in the coop/run. They are happy there for now.
MrsK