It is haying time here in the mountains. The fields to the east of us were done yesterday and today and we are scheduled tomorrow. Haying brings the hawks by the dozens as it stirs up the habitats of the mice, rabbits, snakes and chipmonks. This is my first year with chickens and because we do have a hawk, coyote and other predator load, I decided not to free range, though that was my goal. My run is cage wire on one pen with a plastic poultry net top and my big run for my girls is 4 ft garden fence with about 80% of it covered with the same type of plastic poultry net.
When we were leaving for town this afternoon, there was one hawk perched on top of the coop and another circling about a dozen feet in the air. The girls were huddled under the coop and the meaties were hiding under the tarped area of their pen. The hawks didn't figure it out thank goodness, my girls are only 13 weeks old. There is one area that they could get into the girl's run, but it would likely get caught under the net, then I would really have a mess. I guess I should try to figure out a way to close in that part too.
While this was going on, there were 5 bunnies on the driveway only a few dozen yards away.
5
When we were leaving for town this afternoon, there was one hawk perched on top of the coop and another circling about a dozen feet in the air. The girls were huddled under the coop and the meaties were hiding under the tarped area of their pen. The hawks didn't figure it out thank goodness, my girls are only 13 weeks old. There is one area that they could get into the girl's run, but it would likely get caught under the net, then I would really have a mess. I guess I should try to figure out a way to close in that part too.
While this was going on, there were 5 bunnies on the driveway only a few dozen yards away.
5