Yesterday when I arrived home from work I found my best broody hen eaten by a hawk. There were no other predator foot prints in the snow around the pen, the carcass was stripped of all meat and the poor frizzels feather were flying around the pen, which tells me she was plucked before she was eaten.
My concern is, do the predatory birds remember the site as an easy meal site, and return back for another meal? Or since I live in the "Appalachian Fly Way" is it possible that the raptor is in another state today?
If there is an ornithologists out there who have an idea of the predator life style, I would greatly appreciate an answer. As for the BYC membership, if you have had is experience happen to you, what has been the residual effects. Have you had more losses in the same manner shortly after?
Thanks So Much,
No-roo-stew
My concern is, do the predatory birds remember the site as an easy meal site, and return back for another meal? Or since I live in the "Appalachian Fly Way" is it possible that the raptor is in another state today?
If there is an ornithologists out there who have an idea of the predator life style, I would greatly appreciate an answer. As for the BYC membership, if you have had is experience happen to you, what has been the residual effects. Have you had more losses in the same manner shortly after?
Thanks So Much,
No-roo-stew