Mimi13

fuhgettaboutit
7 Years
Jan 6, 2018
5,857
29,211
957
Centre, AL
Well, it was bound to happen. I’ve just been praying it didn’t.

Last night, 30 minutes before sunset, under tornado watch, very windy, and underneath very limby hickory trees, a hawk, juvenile I suppose, got ahold of my biggest girl, (thank the lord) Cocoa, a partridge cochin.

I say juvenile because I cannot locate a good picture of it anywhere, book or internet. At first glance you would say this was a white bird with grayish stripes running east to west of it body/wings. It was much smaller than my girl, but it managed to completely pluck a baseball sized area right under her vent. No blood or any other injuries that I could see.

She was foraging in a very congested area underneath three huge hickories. Those tree limbs are a mess of crooked wood from the top to about 15’ off the ground. I don’t know how it would have even gotten to her. The only clear spot or swoop zone would have been from across my backyard and all the birds would have been able to clearly see it. Do or can hawks just jump down on their prey?

I got a very good look at it because it didn’t immediately fly off. It stayed on the ground only about five feet from me.

I know because I have chickens there will be more encounters so I would like to know a bit more. First of all, it was a small bird, and very pretty [slap myself for saying such], but like I said earlier, mainly white (that’s what I noticed first) with grayish stripes crossways of its body and wings. For those more experienced, are these minimal descriptions any clue to what kind it was? I live in East Central Alabama.

Then, since it most likely was a juvenile, will it probably be back to try again or will it tuck tail and run since it was unsuccessful with these chickens? I honestly think it was a bit addled from possibly tumbling down the hill with my girl and that’s why it didn’t immediately fly off. It did stay in the bushes until my dog chased it out. Ordinarily she would have been laying right in the mix of chickens as they foraged, but since it was thundering she was under the coop. #150lbwimp

Just from seeing where she was attacked in the yard, I am at a loss of how a hawk makes a hit. I thought they were more of an open area predator. I do not believe there was anything I or my dogs could have done to prevent this. I think we are just deterrents for the most part.

Your advice and expertise is greatly welcomed and appreciated.
 
Your hawk may have been a coopers. They like most hawks are masters of flight. They can dive and swoop and manuver quite well through limbs and trees.
You were lucky to save your hen.
I think all raptors are beatiful, dont be sorry. Its a fact. They are majestic and protected. Mostly these birds eat rodents.
Sometimes here i see advice to chicken owners to plant trees to give your chickens cover, but i have seen many times the raptors land in the trees and pick out the one they want before swooping in for the kill.
I would suspect your hawk is a juvenile and may be so bold due to the fact that he is starving. Young birds that have not honed there hunting skills sometimes do starve.
I would sugest keeping your chickens confined for a while so he will move on.
 
Your hawk may have been a coopers. They like most hawks are masters of flight. They can dive and swoop and manuver quite well through limbs and trees.
You were lucky to save your hen.
I think all raptors are beatiful, dont be sorry. Its a fact. They are majestic and protected. Mostly these birds eat rodents.
Sometimes here i see advice to chicken owners to plant trees to give your chickens cover, but i have seen many times the raptors land in the trees and pick out the one they want before swooping in for the kill.
I would suspect your hawk is a juvenile and may be so bold due to the fact that he is starving. Young birds that have not honed there hunting skills sometimes do starve.
I would sugest keeping your chickens confined for a while so he will move on.
Thank you very much for your response. I live in farm rich country (think cotton, corn and soybean fields as far as the eye can see) and these raptors are posted all along the roads perched high on power/phone lines. With 36 birds I have been very, very fortunate to not have any losses, but I know it’s only a matter of time. I am just so confused because the scenario yesterday was completely opposite what I expected. When I say she was in a congested area, she really was. She was literally in between a wheelbarrow, some pallets, a fence, a wadded up tarp, and the huge tree trunk with two French doors propped up against it. This attack has me second guessing myself and what little I know about hawks. :barnie
 
x2 on @50-45-1's response that this might have been a Cooper's hawk. That was my guess, too - and these "chicken hawks" can be relentless when it comes to an easy chicken meal (regardless of how many fat wild squirrels, rabbits, and other birds there may be!). The only way I've found to keep chickens safe from Cooper's hawks is for them to be secured, including overhead (netting). These small hawks will drop down onto chickens as they forage, even into brush.
 
We lost a chicken to a cooper hawk in the fall. She was hiding in a lilac bush and it actually swooped into the bush and got her. We were free ranging. I've never seen any hawks on our land until we got chickens. We ended up making a huge run and haven't had any problems since. I don't see any hawks anymore. We only let them free range when we're home now.
 

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