Thank you.
Last MI I had was weed whipping w/ my brand new whip. Its still like new. LOL That was like #6 so all I do now is the riding mower. 


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Looks like I have found a new predator. A game cock we call Edgar that tries to roost in 35' Bradford Pear tree about 7 feet up appears to have died in the tree within a few minutes of getting to his roost site. He was in excellent health and his heart may have still been beating when I pulled him down. Dogs ran over to look up into tree as we approached as they apparently could from some distance something was off. From distance in low light he seemed stretched and standing up. I had to pull him down. My guess he either got hung or impaled in a bad spot on one the many thorns. I can find no sign of blood but puncture wounds do not always have free-flowing blood.
He was decidedly a pet. Now I am going to try and kill every Bradford Pear on the place. Should have had that some some time ago.
The thorns are over an inch long though.A tree killed your bird?
I recommend finding out what actually killed your beloved pet.
Veterinary Medical Diagnostic Laboratory
University of Missouri
810 E. Campus Loop
Columbia, Missouri 65211-0001
Phone: 573-882-6811
Call them and they'll send you a FedEx label for shipping.
Personally, I hate invasive Japanese honeysuckle.
They're everywhere and I've been fighting them most of my life.
These trees are pest in a pasture, so not looking for replacements. I have been keeping chickens long time and seen deaths do to a lot of different things, and would not rule out tree x bird interaction. I have even had chicken killed by windows, more than one.I doubt the tree did it. But I have heard the upright reaching stance could mean a heart attack. Some Bradford Pears are thorny, some are not. If you still want to take it down fine but do not think it a culprit. If you do take the tree down, A small white blooming plum tree will give the same effect with no thorns and only get to 8 ft. Birds might be safer in a barn or shed anyway. Sorry for your loss. How old was your bird? Age catches up with us all. Did you do a necropsy? I'm curious regarding the results.
These trees are pest in a pasture, so not looking for replacements. I have been keeping chickens long time and seen deaths do to a lot of different things, and would not rule out tree x bird interaction. I have even had chicken killed by windows, more than one.
A game rooster passing from a heart attack does not seem plausible.
Thorns on some of the trees are a good 2" long.
Yes but you would find wounds if he impaled himself somehow. With no visible injuries hard to blame the tree. If he ate a lot of the fruit if it bore fruit or seed now that could make him sick but unlikely that he would bother it. When mixed with stomach acid in humans the glycosides in the seed makes cyanide. Cyanide would make him ill enough not to eat. Unless he had traces of cyanide in his system, I don't think the tree was the culprit.
https://www.hunker.com/12259380/are-bradford-pear-trees-poisonous-to-humans
You are not reading what I have wrote or otherwise not comprehending. Real inspection of bird has not yet occurred.
Got a mouse in your pocket?We are reading and comprehending rest assured