First loss to predator

featherfooted

Songster
13 Years
Jan 11, 2007
534
16
171
Georgia
After lunch I went out to put clean water in the pool for the ducks and decided to check for eggs. As I went to the coop I noticed there seemed to be a smaller number of my buff orpington chicks than there should be. I counted and only found 6 of the 9(later found one hiding under the ramp). I then saw one dead next to the coop. The chicks are in a smaller pen inside the big pen. I put the rest of them and their silkie mom in the coop. After removing the dead chick I saw only a few places that were bloody, on top of the head and around the legs. I looked closer and found what looked like intestines and a lot of buff feathers. What ever killed them ate one. My guess is a hawk even through I've never seen any around our house. What do you think? My coop is inside a chainlink fenced backyard of about 3/4 acre with other fenced in yard around it. I don't see any other animal making it to the coop in the daylight without Lady, our setter, getting it first. She pretty good at keeping other animals out.
 
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Not always. Sometimes they rip their prey apart on the spot and chow down. I witnessed a hawk attack on a songbird where the hawk just shredded that poor bird where it stood and ate it. I was standing in a window inside my house, but the hawk could see me and kept giving me the hairy eyeball. It didn't stop him from devouring his meal, though.
 
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Yes. Several people here have lost small chicks to crows.
 
I too have lost 2 6wk old chicks to a hawk. It ended up inside the coup after killing one in the yard and my husband found it tearing up another in the coup. It had to walk through a caged small pen and in the small door where it proceeded to commence on it's meal...
 
Yes, hawks often will just kill and eat on the spot. Once I watched an enormous hawk swoop down on my Rhode Island red, rip open her stomach, and begin to devour the intestines in a matter of minutes right in my backyard, before I even had time to get a bat.
 
These chicks were 4 weeks old and about 6" tall. What ever it was came back this morning as everything was in hiding for a while. A friend of mine said that there is a small hawk around here they call a blue darter that could have done it. She said that it's very fast. From what I can find on the internet blue darter is an old name for a Cooper's Hawk. I guess I need to find a way to cover the run. I really hate to not let them free range they love it so much.
 
You can buy bird netting that is used to protect crops such as strawberries. Another thing is to string polypropylene twine all about overhead so that they cannot swoop in and out. I am going to try that first since my pen is so large. You can buy it at your co-op or at tractor supply stores. I have a large crow population here so they keep the hawks and owls away pretty well.
 

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