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Yeah, I think mine tended to start wandering a bit farther every day until they got into trouble -- I didn't realize they had been strolling by the market on the other side of the creek at dawn... by the time I got out to feed them, they'd be meekly in my yard looking for food. It was only until the market bread baker told me they were regularly coming over at 6 a.m. to check out his baked goods, begging for treats that I knew about it! They were very sneaky. This had been going on for several weeks apparently. All this on a 40-acre farm (as if they didn't have enough places to go on 40 acres).
I had to do a couple of things: Penned them up just on market day (once a week); and/or I would keep half of them in the pen, and let the other half roam, and then switch the next day and let the other half roam. I found out having their buddies penned up kept the free-rangers from roaming far. This only works if they're from the same family or group and don't want to be apart.
Also, I finally got a big group of 30 and didn't want them roaming, so I put them in a large, fenced pasture and clipped their wing feathers on one side so they couldn't fly out. This worked for two months until a FOX showed up and started eating one every night.
After THAT happened, I had to pen the 30 up each night in a hoopcoop in their pasture. Now no fox bothers them. i've sold them all for Thanksgiving dinners, so I'll be back down to my 6 breeders (who sleep 40 feet up in a tree at night) as well as 4 young'uns who sleep high in the tree as well.
Good luck with keeping yours home. It's a thrill to see them enjoying themselves so much, but like you said, with so many they can get out of control. Especially you must worry about them in the spring -- mating behavior makes them act very weird, fighting, nesting, etc. I would have a pen for when needed. I made mine out of an old trampoline (put wire around the sides).
Yeah, I think mine tended to start wandering a bit farther every day until they got into trouble -- I didn't realize they had been strolling by the market on the other side of the creek at dawn... by the time I got out to feed them, they'd be meekly in my yard looking for food. It was only until the market bread baker told me they were regularly coming over at 6 a.m. to check out his baked goods, begging for treats that I knew about it! They were very sneaky. This had been going on for several weeks apparently. All this on a 40-acre farm (as if they didn't have enough places to go on 40 acres).
I had to do a couple of things: Penned them up just on market day (once a week); and/or I would keep half of them in the pen, and let the other half roam, and then switch the next day and let the other half roam. I found out having their buddies penned up kept the free-rangers from roaming far. This only works if they're from the same family or group and don't want to be apart.
Also, I finally got a big group of 30 and didn't want them roaming, so I put them in a large, fenced pasture and clipped their wing feathers on one side so they couldn't fly out. This worked for two months until a FOX showed up and started eating one every night.
After THAT happened, I had to pen the 30 up each night in a hoopcoop in their pasture. Now no fox bothers them. i've sold them all for Thanksgiving dinners, so I'll be back down to my 6 breeders (who sleep 40 feet up in a tree at night) as well as 4 young'uns who sleep high in the tree as well.
Good luck with keeping yours home. It's a thrill to see them enjoying themselves so much, but like you said, with so many they can get out of control. Especially you must worry about them in the spring -- mating behavior makes them act very weird, fighting, nesting, etc. I would have a pen for when needed. I made mine out of an old trampoline (put wire around the sides).
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