This predator made it into the perimeter somehow, either squeezed through the 4" opening in the livestock fencing, which is part of the perimeter on the back side (some of it is welded wire), or was dumped over the fence by some unsavory character who should be horse-whipped, not sure which. I personally walked the perimeter of the 2 acre enclosure once we had the predator contained to see if someone had cut the fence as someone did a while back or there was a slide-under area and the entire thing is still secure.
Saw it behind the garden and ran to shut the broody pen door we had opened a few minutes earlier for my blue Orp hen to come out to do her usual eat-drink-poop for the day, then yelled for my DH. When I realized that the dog running behind the garden near the bantam coop was a mere puppy, I think a purebred blue tick coonhound by breed, I called it, it wagged its tail and came to me, groveling. Called Animal Control, who surprisingly answered the phone and then actually SHOWED UP, if you can believe it!
I made no attempt to call any neighbors or ask around because, frankly, I'm sick of doing their job of watching out for their dogs for them. Haven't a clue who the pup belongs to, but if they want it, they'll have to pay to get it back now, if they even care and didn't just dump it on us. Good thing it was a puppy, guessing maybe no more than 12 weeks old. An adult may not have made it to animal control. It had a flea collar, but no ID tag or actual dog collar on it. Very sweet female.



Saw it behind the garden and ran to shut the broody pen door we had opened a few minutes earlier for my blue Orp hen to come out to do her usual eat-drink-poop for the day, then yelled for my DH. When I realized that the dog running behind the garden near the bantam coop was a mere puppy, I think a purebred blue tick coonhound by breed, I called it, it wagged its tail and came to me, groveling. Called Animal Control, who surprisingly answered the phone and then actually SHOWED UP, if you can believe it!
I made no attempt to call any neighbors or ask around because, frankly, I'm sick of doing their job of watching out for their dogs for them. Haven't a clue who the pup belongs to, but if they want it, they'll have to pay to get it back now, if they even care and didn't just dump it on us. Good thing it was a puppy, guessing maybe no more than 12 weeks old. An adult may not have made it to animal control. It had a flea collar, but no ID tag or actual dog collar on it. Very sweet female.
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