I agree. I have been chasing the hens off the nests every evening and it just doubles down the fact they can't be left out at night.You are lucky that eggs are all that are going missing.
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I agree. I have been chasing the hens off the nests every evening and it just doubles down the fact they can't be left out at night.You are lucky that eggs are all that are going missing.
Sorry, the fox is taking what you haven't bothered to protect. Eggs out in the bushes are fair game. If you want eggs, your birds should be laying them in nests in the coop. Pen them up until they learn to do so. You are deliberately attracting the wildlife by allowing the birds to wander off and lay where they should not be. It isn't the foxes fault you don't protect your birds and their output.Over the last week the eggs on my outside nests have been disappearing so I decided to find out who was doing it.Doesn't make me happy as you can see my coop flyway in the background. Traps are out.
Oh no!!! Boy a good varmint to have fixated on your guineas!!!!Over the last week the eggs on my outside nests have been disappearing so I decided to find out who was doing it.Doesn't make me happy as you can see my coop flyway in the background. Traps are out.
Whew, harsh assessment! I agree though that guinea nests attract predators. Until I get my new run finished, I can’t lock our guineas up and retrain them to use the coop nests. I’ve had numerous rat snakes enter the coop through the pop door and eat eggs/kill keets anyway. For my outdoor nests that I have right now, I’m collecting all eggs (marked and newly laid) every night. I have the guineas door set to delay opening until 8:30 AM (dawn is 6:30 AM), so that gives me time to replace the marked eggs in the nest.Sorry, the fox is taking what you haven't bothered to protect. Eggs out in the bushes are fair game. If you want eggs, your birds should be laying them in nests in the coop. Pen them up until they learn to do so. You are deliberately attracting the wildlife by allowing the birds to wander off and lay where they should not be. It isn't the foxes fault you don't protect your birds and their output.
Sorry, the fox is taking what you haven't bothered to protect. Eggs out in the bushes are fair game. If you want eggs, your birds should be laying them in nests in the coop. Pen them up until they learn to do so. You are deliberately attracting the wildlife by allowing the birds to wander off and lay where they should not be. It isn't the foxes fault you don't protect your birds and their output.
Egg eating chickens are not that uncommon. It usually starts with an accidentally broken egg or a soft shell egg. My chickens will quickly clean up any broken or soft shell eggs. One hen in particular will go in my live traps for the turkey eggs that I use for bait. She normally leaves chicken eggs alone.I am curious, although you've both apparently located your thieves- in the chicken forum, it was said that chickens will eat their eggs. Not something I've heard before, but they scramble eggs for them and give them eggshells, soso, I was wondering if guineas would do that.