:hugs Thanks. So good to see you, it has been ages! We’ve missed you too. I’m sorry you’ve had some losses, hope it wasn’t too traumatic!
Thank you! 💗 We were away from home last weekend, but our son's were here. So, a little less traumatic than being here.
 
Thanks. Frank is certainly heavier than a coyote and so far we’ve only seen a single in the yard, but I’ve seen them around the neighborhood in pairs recently and I’m not sure he could take on two at once. Plus I don’t want him to get hurt. I would rather just not keep chickens if it came to that.

I’ve seen news reports here recently that the coyotes are becoming brave enough to follow and advance on humans. One lady was able to keep them at bay until another person came to help her but just barely. They were after her dog not her, but I feel like I could be in danger if I’m out there alone so I carry protection.

Nope, sure wouldn't want to endanger your dogs. I just thought maybe their presence would be enough to keep a coyote away. But sheesh, if they're getting bold enough to advance on humans that's scary.
 
This is a summer of change I guess. I’ve had chickens here for ten years or so and other than aerial predators I have never had any issues. Then over the course of less than a week I was down to only the three ducks. Three very traumatized ducks. DH thought raccoon but I didn’t think so. I’ve read too much about what coons do and this wasn’t it. I was pretty sure what he saw was a cat and after we put up the trail cam it was confirmed there was a cat coming through the yard, but that isn’t what was killing my chickens. They’d been partially eaten and a cat wouldn’t be able to literally tear one in half. Plus one of the bodies was completely gone and it obviously wasn’t a hawk.

We have an acquaintance that had several pullets nearing POL so we bought a bunch of them. Lockdown was first while we figured out what was going on and I put a trail cam out by the coop; it caught a coyote in our yard. I started letting the gals out later in the day and checked on them hourly and so it went for a couple of weeks. Then our neighbor knocked on the door around 0830 on morning and said she saw a coyote around the corner with one my barred rocks in its mouth. Sure enough, it had one of my girls.

We have two trail cams at this point and a few perimeter alarms so if anything comes over the wall I’ll know. But all my older girls are gone. I have five chickens left, two barred rocks, two RIRs and an EE.

Since we can’t be here ready to defend all the time the plan is to eventually put coyote rollers on top of the wall. We will see how feasible that turns out to be. For now the perimeter alarms are alerting as they should and we haven’t had more losses. I don’t have the crew in lockdown, but I am waiting until a little later in the day to let them out and then spending the first hour or so out there with them.

The ducks have been trained to go to bed though, something they haven’t ever done. They spend the night in the shade garden and we are making them a protected space to stay out wind and rain if they want.
I'm so sorry for your losses :hugs We had so many when we had our poultry, but we also live in the country, with lots of predators. I is hard to loss the flock. You take care and you have us to talk to anytime.
 
This is a summer of change I guess. I’ve had chickens here for ten years or so and other than aerial predators I have never had any issues. Then over the course of less than a week I was down to only the three ducks. Three very traumatized ducks. DH thought raccoon but I didn’t think so. I’ve read too much about what coons do and this wasn’t it. I was pretty sure what he saw was a cat and after we put up the trail cam it was confirmed there was a cat coming through the yard, but that isn’t what was killing my chickens. They’d been partially eaten and a cat wouldn’t be able to literally tear one in half. Plus one of the bodies was completely gone and it obviously wasn’t a hawk.

We have an acquaintance that had several pullets nearing POL so we bought a bunch of them. Lockdown was first while we figured out what was going on and I put a trail cam out by the coop; it caught a coyote in our yard. I started letting the gals out later in the day and checked on them hourly and so it went for a couple of weeks. Then our neighbor knocked on the door around 0830 on morning and said she saw a coyote around the corner with one my barred rocks in its mouth. Sure enough, it had one of my girls.

We have two trail cams at this point and a few perimeter alarms so if anything comes over the wall I’ll know. But all my older girls are gone. I have five chickens left, two barred rocks, two RIRs and an EE.

Since we can’t be here ready to defend all the time the plan is to eventually put coyote rollers on top of the wall. We will see how feasible that turns out to be. For now the perimeter alarms are alerting as they should and we haven’t had more losses. I don’t have the crew in lockdown, but I am waiting until a little later in the day to let them out and then spending the first hour or so out there with them.

The ducks have been trained to go to bed though, something they haven’t ever done. They spend the night in the shade garden and we are making them a protected space to stay out wind and rain if they want.
:hugs
 
I hope the neighborhood/county can do something about those coyotes! I've never heard or seen of those coyote rollers, but that seems like a good idea and I hope they're not too much trouble to put up and they work!

It is so good to have you back, IM!
Hi Jen, thank you!

I haven’t contacted anyone about them. If they come after me, which I seriously doubt, then there will be a body to collect but that’s about it. And only if chasing it out doesn’t work. Good to know about the rollers work, we’re doing a DIY version when the $$$ permit.
 
Nope, sure wouldn't want to endanger your dogs. I just thought maybe their presence would be enough to keep a coyote away. But sheesh, if they're getting bold enough to advance on humans that's scary.
I honestly thought just the smell of the dogs in the yard might keep them away. I guess smell doesn’t tell anything about size and fighting ability :lol:
 
I'm so sorry for your losses :hugs We had so many when we had our poultry, but we also live in the country, with lots of predators. I is hard to loss the flock. You take care and you have us to talk to anytime.
Thank you Sue :hugs I expected losses here and there, we have aerial predators too. After no issues for so long I was pretty shocked. I didn’t expect a coyote to go in our yard because of our dogs and that was a dumb assumption.
 

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