SamLockwood
Songster
- Sep 29, 2022
- 457
- 934
- 166
I do, but it's not for everyone. I'm on a relatively large piece of land (16 acres) on which I've lived for 17 years and I'm very familiar with what kinds of predators are nearby and their general habits. I'm also willing and able to shoot any raccoons, coyotes, etc. that are stupid enough to make themselves visible on my property.
There's pros (insect control, my adult birds lay a bit more often), and cons (besides the obvious, the old birds have a habit of following me into the house if I leave any doors open, which is NOT cool if you don't want chicken poop in your floors).
Still, my first two weeks free-ranging I lost one of the four remaining birds from my original flock. I thought I lost another but it turned out she's become a master of stealth and is impossible to find when she naps under the deck or in the shrubberies.
The new flock has been doing "supervised" free ranging for the last 5 & half weeks, with the only "major" incident being when some neighborhood kids wandered up the 600' driveway and the guinea half of the flock made it known they DON'T like visitors.
There's pros (insect control, my adult birds lay a bit more often), and cons (besides the obvious, the old birds have a habit of following me into the house if I leave any doors open, which is NOT cool if you don't want chicken poop in your floors).
Still, my first two weeks free-ranging I lost one of the four remaining birds from my original flock. I thought I lost another but it turned out she's become a master of stealth and is impossible to find when she naps under the deck or in the shrubberies.
The new flock has been doing "supervised" free ranging for the last 5 & half weeks, with the only "major" incident being when some neighborhood kids wandered up the 600' driveway and the guinea half of the flock made it known they DON'T like visitors.