My elderly dachshund killed 3 of my adolescent chickens several months ago, in 3 separate events. (1 pullet per event.) All my fault. So I became even more vigilant.
The past few weeks, I've been working with him now that I let the chickens range freely when I'm at home. The chickens are all grown up (except for six adolescents, two of which are bantam cochins) and the rooster has put Zorro in his place a couple of times. He sorta lunges, half-heartedly, when a chicken RUNS, stopping when I yell "No!" but otherwise there have been no problems for 3 months. I was heartened by this.
And I got careless. Whilst expanding the run (the chickens do not free range when I am not home), Zorro caught himself one of the bantam cochins and ran from me with it in his mouth. By the time I got to them, it was too late, and the cochin died in my arms.
So now I know his "good behavior" was related to chicken size. Since the few bantams I have will never be bigger than the dog, I can never, ever trust him anywhere near them.
The past few weeks, I've been working with him now that I let the chickens range freely when I'm at home. The chickens are all grown up (except for six adolescents, two of which are bantam cochins) and the rooster has put Zorro in his place a couple of times. He sorta lunges, half-heartedly, when a chicken RUNS, stopping when I yell "No!" but otherwise there have been no problems for 3 months. I was heartened by this.
And I got careless. Whilst expanding the run (the chickens do not free range when I am not home), Zorro caught himself one of the bantam cochins and ran from me with it in his mouth. By the time I got to them, it was too late, and the cochin died in my arms.
So now I know his "good behavior" was related to chicken size. Since the few bantams I have will never be bigger than the dog, I can never, ever trust him anywhere near them.