Didnt want to highjack this post again, and this is not directed at the OP, but........
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Well thats a pretty moronic statement. Lets see, animals that graze over dozens, hundreds or even thousands of acres, verses animals that are typically kept in areas dozens, hundreds or sometimes thousands of feet. Mmmm, BIG difference. To blame a wolf, for targeting an easy meal, dumb. Yes, the rancher has a small right to protect his investment, since they have NO WAY of containing a large herd of sheep. Plus, ranchers figure in x amount of loss each year, and they dont consider their sheep pets with names. The wolves were almost wiped out by folks protecting livestock and game animals and that led too deer and elk populations suffering. Now take the chicken owner, who owns 12 birds. They dont lock the birds in the coop one night. A coon reaches thru the fence and kills a hen. Coons fault? I think not. I see it on here weekly, where somebody lets their birds free range without watching, have a uncovered run, or unsecure coop then lose a bird or 2 or 10. Many folks blame the killer. Why? Cause its an easy out. Nobody wants to know that they were at fault of not protecting their birds. It would be horrible that THEY killed their poor, sweet chickens Molly, Lois and Tinkerbell. Lets just solve it the easy way and blow away the bloody pest! BAM! Take the blame, learn from the your mistake, its as easy as that. It really does not take much to secure birds, especially at night. A properly built coop, is very easy to make varmint proof. A little time and material is all it takes, but wait, thats work and many dont have time or knowledge... Then you have the folks who say they cant afford to fully protect their birds. Well, suffer the losses, or dont own chickens. Know this all sounds harsh, but its a fact of life. Yes, some coons, skunks and opossums can be very determined, as well as dogs, and there are times when the problem should be delt with. Killing every coon, skunk, opossum, fox, bobcat etc, that comes near ones birds is not the solution. It will only bring bigger problems later. Kill all the predators, and soon you will be over run with rodents, snakes and rabbits. Thru this whole thread, my few posts had just one thing to say, protect your birds! One more thing, DNR will not remove a bird of prey for killing or harassing any livestock. Golden Eagles kill cute sweet baby lambs every year...Bah