Challenges of living in the woods with chickens

I live in a forested swamp in the southeast and my chickens free-range outside 24/7. They co-habitate with foxes on my property and a variety of other predators pass through regularly. None of them present any danger to my chickens. At the very most I'll lose one or two a year, and those being the old or sickly. The predators here have no chance of catching healthy gamefowl or landraces, and even heavy production chickens survive just fine with some basic predator mitigation

As others have corrected noted, chickens are the descendants of junglefowl and they're far safer in the woods than any field

It's possible that in some environments a white chicken will do passably well, but I think in most places they're basically doomed. When I originally began I had chickens of all colors, however the white and lavender got picked off by hawks whereas camoflaged colors never did. Now out of compassion for my animals I'll never keep any chicken that isn't camoflaged

Why keep prey animals with the added curse of not even camouflaging like their ancestors did? Seems cruel to me. One guy on BYC had a fox get into his coop that had 99 white chickens and 1 black chicken. Guess who the only survivor was?
Very interesting. So do you really have no coop at all? How do you go about finding the eggs to collect. What chicken breeds do you have? I’m not sure what people mean by landraces.
 
I have 13, one each of: Calico princess, black sex-link, cinnamon queen, California tan, blue laced gold Wyandotte, cream legbar, starlight green Egger, Easter egger, barred rock, ameraucana, red star, buff Orpington, and speckled Sussex. I don’t plan on letting them be forest chickens. I think they aren’t designed for that. They have what I hope is a very secure coop and I’ll just let them out near the house when I’m available to keep an eye on them. But down the road I want to look into game hens or mixes that include that who will be flightier and warier in the woods. I was telling my daughter-in-law today about the book I’m reading ( “Free Range Survial Chickens”) and she said to my son, “I told you forest chickens were a thing!”
I’m so glad I started this thread cos I had no idea forest chickens were a thing! Wow you have quite a mix in your flock.
 
Very interesting. So do you really have no coop at all? How do you go about finding the eggs to collect. What chicken breeds do you have? I’m not sure what people mean by landraces.
That’s exactly my thinking—I need nest boxes at just the right height. My back is in rough shape (though they’ll be fusing it in August), so I’m not about to go hunting for hidden eggs. As a friend once joked, I’m definitely a 'fair-weather chicken keeper'.

I let them free-range all day, sure, spoil them with wonderful exotic foods—but I’m not foraging for my breakfast. I want my eggs served up on a silver platter (after I clean out the shite in the coop, of course).

But my jungelfowl- who knows what she is actually become. Right now, I don't like her.
 
I should probably explain why I’m not a fan of my jungle/game fowl:
  • She looks like a roadrunner—skinny, fast, and not the least bit personable.
  • She might be a little slow upstairs—she’s always the last to come to food or catch on to what’s going on.
  • She’s excellent at escaping predators… which unfortunately means I can’t catch her either for even health checks.
  • Because of her small size, she gets picked on by the other hens pretty regularly.
  • Who knows what her sub-breeds even are—she’s a real mystery mix.
  • Compared to my RIR mixes (no idea- but definitely not pure RIR's!) and my Leghorn/Marans/Easter Egger girls, she’s just a complete pain in the butt- which is why we call her Gypsy Chick.
We’re installing an automatic chicken coop door soon in the new coop, and honestly, I’m fully expecting my jungle/game fowl to get locked out—she’s so scatterbrained and easily distracted, I doubt she’ll make it in on time. I do free-range my flock all day, which helps cut down on feed costs, but when I weigh that against the extra effort it takes to care for her, the tiny eggs she might lay, and the complete lack of joy she brings to the whole chicken-keeping experience, I really question if she’s worth the hassle. Just my 2 cents on balancing the idealistic chicken flock/family/life with the reality of some of the wild ones.

However, If I was to breed her a few generations with some of my other flock- now THAT might be something incredible.

Screenshot 2025-06-17 at 1.27.08 PM.png

Oh dear, for the record- I dont feed them tomatoes, those are chunks of mango, but they are frozen with passionfruit and dragonfruit (I grow them) and plantains, and when it begins to defrost, I added in watercress and brussel sprouts. And that is a piece of spaghetti squash that they ate earlier.
 
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I should probably explain why I’m not a fan of my jungle/game fowl:
  • She looks like a roadrunner—skinny, fast, and not the least bit personable.
  • She might be a little slow upstairs—she’s always the last to come to food or catch on to what’s going on.
  • She’s excellent at escaping predators… which unfortunately means I can’t catch her either for even health checks.
  • Because of her small size, she gets picked on by the other hens pretty regularly.
  • Who knows what her sub-breeds even are—she’s a real mystery mix.
  • Compared to my RIR mixes (no idea- but definitely not pure RIR's!) and my Leghorn/Marans/Easter Egger girls, she’s just a complete pain in the butt- which is why we call her Gypsy Chick.
We’re installing an automatic chicken coop door soon in the new coop, and honestly, I’m fully expecting my jungle/game fowl to get locked out—she’s so scatterbrained and easily distracted, I doubt she’ll make it in on time. I do free-range my flock all day, which helps cut down on feed costs, but when I weigh that against the extra effort it takes to care for her, the tiny eggs she might lay, and the complete lack of joy she brings to the whole chicken-keeping experience, I really question if she’s worth the hassle. Just my 2 cents on balancing the idealistic chicken flock/family/life with the reality of some of the wild ones.

However, If I was to breed her a few generations with some of my other flock- now THAT might be something incredible.

View attachment 4150591

Oh dear, for the record- I dont feed them tomatoes, those are chunks of mango, but they are frozen with passionfruit and dragonfruit (I grow them) and plantains, and when it begins to defrost, I added in watercress and brussel sprouts. And that is a piece of spaghetti squash that they ate earlier.
Send her my way-she can sleep in my trees and maybe teach my idiots a thing or two 😆 Like, if you do get locked out of the coop do NOT sleep on the ground UNDER the tree.
 
I should probably explain why I’m not a fan of my jungle/game fowl:
  • She looks like a roadrunner—skinny, fast, and not the least bit personable.
  • She might be a little slow upstairs—she’s always the last to come to food or catch on to what’s going on.
  • She’s excellent at escaping predators… which unfortunately means I can’t catch her either for even health checks.
  • Because of her small size, she gets picked on by the other hens pretty regularly.
  • Who knows what her sub-breeds even are—she’s a real mystery mix.
  • Compared to my RIR mixes (no idea- but definitely not pure RIR's!) and my Leghorn/Marans/Easter Egger girls, she’s just a complete pain in the butt- which is why we call her Gypsy Chick.
We’re installing an automatic chicken coop door soon in the new coop, and honestly, I’m fully expecting my jungle/game fowl to get locked out—she’s so scatterbrained and easily distracted, I doubt she’ll make it in on time. I do free-range my flock all day, which helps cut down on feed costs, but when I weigh that against the extra effort it takes to care for her, the tiny eggs she might lay, and the complete lack of joy she brings to the whole chicken-keeping experience, I really question if she’s worth the hassle. Just my 2 cents on balancing the idealistic chicken flock/family/life with the reality of some of the wild ones.

However, If I was to breed her a few generations with some of my other flock- now THAT might be something incredible.

View attachment 4150591

Oh dear, for the record- I dont feed them tomatoes, those are chunks of mango, but they are frozen with passionfruit and dragonfruit (I grow them) and plantains, and when it begins to defrost, I added in watercress and brussel sprouts. And that is a piece of spaghetti squash that they ate earlier.
I guess a jungle fowl/game mix isn't really designed to be cooped up or be a pet like the others? I'd be happy for that when I'm ready to let them loose in the woods.
 

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