anderstr196
Songster
He's doing soooo much better and back to chicken shenanigans with his brothers and sisters today!
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He's doing soooo much better and back to chicken shenanigans with his brothers and sisters today!
View attachment 1759718
Bird netting, I have it over my runs and it is 7 ft by 100 roll I found at lowes..I think the hawks here are smart or just extremely tenacious because I've seen one down the road perching on top of a fake owland the crisscrossed twine doesn't seem to faze them. I'm going to figure something out though...this was the 3rd failed attempt a hawk has made on my flock and I thought for sure it had succeeded this time.
I think hawks are beautiful creatures and I know they're just doing what nature intended but I'm not raising chickens to feed them.![]()
Ugh... There are so many black vultures that fly over my yard every day, along with the turkey vultures. I read up on them and it said it was rare that the black ones would go for a living animal and next to never for the turkey vulture. I have the bird net over my bantams run but my standards have free range. I have a little over 20 acres of mainly wooded area for them to forage in. Now I’m rethinking the free ranging. Makes me wonder what has changed in the environment that the black ones are going for live animals and something as big as a calf.Apparently the black buzzard, or black vulture, is getting in on this livestock-killing action as well, since about 2016 in the MO Ozarks. They seem to go after newborn calves in particular, an especially expensive loss for a rancher, considering an adult bull can bring upwards of $2,500. But readers are cautioned that the bird is protected and may only be shot by hunters holding a permit. Anyone wanting more info is urged to contact the Mo Wildlife Conservation Dept. wildlife biologist.
Source: https://www.ozarksfirst.com/news/a-...ltures-attack-on-cattle-farmers-in-the-ozarks
Ugh... There are so many black vultures that fly over my yard every day, along with the turkey vultures. I read up on them and it said it was rare that the black ones would go for a living animal and next to never for the turkey vulture. I have the bird net over my bantams run but my standards have free range. I have a little over 20 acres of mainly wooded area for them to forage in. Now I’m rethinking the free ranging. Makes me wonder what has changed in the environment that the black ones are going for live animals and something as big as a calf.
I’m new here in NW Alabama, but it is terrible here with the black ones. When it was still chilly in the morning they would roost in the bare trees with their wings spread. It was so creepy, there was at least 30 in the trees. I don’t see as many turkey vultures this year as I did last year. Now that I know the black ones will attack I will upgrade my defenses!Yes, there are 2 different kinds of buzzards. You have the turkey buzzard which is good to have around and cleans up dead animals, they won't bother anything unless they are dead. Then you have what we call locally a black buzzard (I don't know what the proper name is). They are solid black and most have white tips on their wings, they will kill live animals.
The black buzzards aren't native to our area and started getting really bad about 10 or so years ago. These are the ones that need to be killed. They actually hurt the beneficial turkey buzzard population, because they will come in droves and run the turkey buzzards off of a dead animal. Tennessee wants them gone, but they have no control over the federal Migratory Bird Act, which makes it illegal to kill them.