Did it buy you a drink first?![]()
Do you have any idea how long it has been since ANYTHING has bought me a drink ?


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Did it buy you a drink first?![]()
Even if you kill a hawk, it's not going to do any good. They're an avian predator, they fly long distances to look for food. You'd have to kill all the hawks in the area (which you should not do, for multiple reasons) to make sure that a hawk never got near your chickens again. It's not like other predators with smaller ranges.
One thing you can try doing is befriending any local corvids, or more belligerent smaller birds. Crows, ravens, blue jays, grackles, etc will drive away hawks for you.
Do as you please but remember that hanging always comes after the catching. Dead hawks always were a prerequisite to live free range chickens. To pretend otherwise is to ignore the facts. In many ways a chemical control of those hawks killing your poultry is in effect a good practice for the environment. The reason being that you are only controlling the hawks that are actively feeding on domestic poultry. This is much better on the hawk population than the kill them all knee jerk reaction.
So we are saying that it is bad if a hawk experiences a painful demise while it is well and good if a chicken is basically eaten to death while your hen is in the clutches of a hawk? I think that this calluses regard for the lives and well being of the chickens that we keep is shocking.
Therefore, killing those predisposed to eating chicken would end all hawk problems,,,, makes sense to moi.Chickens are prey animals. All hawks are genetically predisposed to eating prey animals.
Therefore, killing those predisposed to eating chicken would end all hawk problems,,,, makes sense to moi.
... Thanks for lifting my blindfold... You're right though. Hadn't thought about the 'where one sneaks out, another can get in. Perhaps simply due to the generally inaccessible nature of the breach in the high corner... But yes, something could get in if it were aware of it, except for the escapee chicken. Thus the urgency to clip - it can't get back in when the coop is locked.If a hen can get out the coop eves, a predator can get in... Hawks have been known to get in under netting loosely attached to the run walls
Since I saw the Cooper Hawk on my hen's head, it is a given mode of operation for it. It isn't much of a stretch to see that other raptors, owls might do the same.I thought it was an Owl that took the heads. Or at least that is what I was told as a kid
Actually, if it worked to deter further attacks on my flock by leaving them with a bellyache bearing binge on tainted guts from their last kill, it would be terrific. Non poisonous of course. And. I. Did. Just. This.Hawks will return to the same kill so it is possible to put something on the remains of your chicken that will give yea-old-Coopers-hawk a belly ache. I am sure that this is no more painful for the Coopers hawk than it is for your chicken being eaten alive while a hawk twists its talons in your hens guts.
The killer in this thread is migratory... Perhaps en route from Minnesota to Florida? The "regulars in my local area are kept fed most of the time with rabbit squirrels moles voles rats mice fish frogs wild birds etc. We live adjacent to wetlands.Even if you kill a hawk, it's not going to do any good. They're an avian predator, they fly long distances to look for food. You'd have to kill all the hawks in the area (which you should not do, for multiple reasons) to make sure that a hawk never got near your chickens again. It's not like other predators with smaller ranges.
One thing you can try doing is befriending any local corvids, or more belligerent smaller birds. Crows, ravens, blue jays, grackles, etc will drive away hawks for you.
Umm... People are predators...Used to be predators were afraid of people and stayed away unless they were desperate.. ... Just saying
Wow! Too bad it's illegal to mess with them here... Conjuring up ideas of using a BeepBeep Pelt decoy to lure and catch the offending stalker before it strikes again... I'm fairly convinced the same hawk that attacked Missy last spring is who dunnit to BeepBeep!Some species feed primarily on mammals. Of those that feed on avian species some become specialists. Those are the birds that stop feeding on wild species and go for our 'easier' domesticated birds. Some are easily dissuaded, and others are as brazen as mustellids. I have had Cooper's strike birds at my feet, hit aviaries right next to me, and one even made a pass at me when I was holding a pigeon.
Feeding the crows helps.. I have my compost pile close enough to the yard to attract the crows.. I leave them eggs now and then as a thank you gift.Egads. So much turmoil in my hijacked thread. Movin on now, having let my skinned bird age in the fridge and the pelt in a cooler in a cool area for a few days, its time to cook the chicken. The rest of the flock are cooped up except for during my brief excursions to do yard work. I try to pick times when the crows are around and have not seen hawks then. But they are still scoping my yard at other times. And, the fox is still coming nightly for any bones and scraps at each home along this road.