GCrumb
Songster
- Apr 15, 2023
- 193
- 440
- 131
Hey, uhh. You don't need to buy predator urine. You're a predator yourself and make your own for free. My setup is much more predator-resistant now and I'd forgotten about it, but when my family's poultry free-ranged and roosted in a barn stall I used to pee around the barn. You will probably find that a lot of men and boys are pretty into doing this. All my high school buddies were.
It did seem to work.
A number of reasons this may be impractical spring to mind. They can (largely?) be solved by peeing in a container and then taking it out and pouring it. Somehow this seems like a weirder suggestion.
This is not likely to work if a predator has already learned that the coop is there and knows it's got somebody delicious inside.
I'd suggest you move your birds inside every night for a week or so, and pee circles 'round the coop.
My experience is that a weasel will take one and try to drag it off, so will a fox or coyote or skunk. But a racooon will pull the heads off as many as it can get and just eat the heads.
It did seem to work.
A number of reasons this may be impractical spring to mind. They can (largely?) be solved by peeing in a container and then taking it out and pouring it. Somehow this seems like a weirder suggestion.
This is not likely to work if a predator has already learned that the coop is there and knows it's got somebody delicious inside.
I'd suggest you move your birds inside every night for a week or so, and pee circles 'round the coop.
My experience is that a weasel will take one and try to drag it off, so will a fox or coyote or skunk. But a racooon will pull the heads off as many as it can get and just eat the heads.
Last edited: