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I would really, really suggest you get some chickens and a large muscovy drake before theorizing about the stupidity of usual arrangements
Look, even if chickens flap up to a raised doorway, they need a landing pad. Unless the chicken is small and the popdoor is wide the popdoor sill itself is a pretty perilous place for them to land. They can more or less do it if they have to but it ain't pretty and doesn't work well. This is not theory, this is observation.
Second, training birds to spend their nights where you want them to is a WHOLE lot easier if the place is APPEALING to them. If you browse this section you will find a number of past threads in which people were *unable* to convince their chickens to go indoors for the night until they reconfigured some aspects of their coops.
Finally, yer adult muscovy is not exactly the most agile critter to begin with.
Are ramps vitally necessary? Not generally. Are they significantly USEFUL? Generally yes.
Dropping a ramp to the door DOES NOT NECESSARILY KEEP PREDATORS OUT, though, so I am not sure what you would achieve by that part of your suggestion.
I would really, really suggest you get some chickens and a large muscovy drake before theorizing about the stupidity of usual arrangements

Look, even if chickens flap up to a raised doorway, they need a landing pad. Unless the chicken is small and the popdoor is wide the popdoor sill itself is a pretty perilous place for them to land. They can more or less do it if they have to but it ain't pretty and doesn't work well. This is not theory, this is observation.
Second, training birds to spend their nights where you want them to is a WHOLE lot easier if the place is APPEALING to them. If you browse this section you will find a number of past threads in which people were *unable* to convince their chickens to go indoors for the night until they reconfigured some aspects of their coops.
Finally, yer adult muscovy is not exactly the most agile critter to begin with.
Are ramps vitally necessary? Not generally. Are they significantly USEFUL? Generally yes.
Dropping a ramp to the door DOES NOT NECESSARILY KEEP PREDATORS OUT, though, so I am not sure what you would achieve by that part of your suggestion.
How about my basic design but with a door on the entrance that I use religiously for a few months, and most of the time for a year or so, to see what happens that way? It would open by sliding down inside the wall and have a latch lock to hold it.
Hey, if you want to build this whole thing and sink a lot of time and energy and material into it, do it any way you please... note that a few months proves NOTHING about its riskiness to predators (unless of course your birds get et in that timeframe, but even with high predation risk they very well might not).
All we're saying is, it is a lot of extra work to go to, without actually producing any much likelihood of improved security. Especially when improved security is easily enough come by through conventional methods.
Hey, if you want to build this whole thing and sink a lot of time and energy and material into it, do it any way you please... note that a few months proves NOTHING about its riskiness to predators (unless of course your birds get et in that timeframe, but even with high predation risk they very well might not).
All we're saying is, it is a lot of extra work to go to, without actually producing any much likelihood of improved security. Especially when improved security is easily enough come by through conventional methods.
Is it possible that they would want to fly up instead of out into the open?
The bottom line is that if the birds are in an area where they are exposed to predators, they are likely to get et by any predator that attacks them.
The bottom line is that if the birds are in an area where they are exposed to predators, they are likely to get et by any predator that attacks them.
If some would have the sense to do this and others would not, I'd want to breed the smart ones.
You are assuming quite a lot about genetic contribution towards instantaneous reaction. I wish you luck but doubt your premise is correct.
You are assuming quite a lot about genetic contribution towards instantaneous reaction. I wish you luck but doubt your premise is correct.
I don't see how anyone could know that birds wouldn't go into some type of high enclosure, unless they know of someone who has tried this before.
People who have some experience with a) poultry behavior and b) predator behavior are giving you their best opinions on the LIKELY results of your setup. It is your choice whether or not to believe your thought-experiments and guesses are likelier to be correct than the estimation of those with actual real-world experience with the critters.
People who have some experience with a) poultry behavior and b) predator behavior are giving you their best opinions on the LIKELY results of your setup. It is your choice whether or not to believe your thought-experiments and guesses are likelier to be correct than the estimation of those with actual real-world experience with the critters.
You mean they are likely to pile up and smoother each other? This can't kill them all.
Well jeez, if you are just trying to usually have "some" survivor(s) of an attack, why are you going to all this trouble?
Honestly, I don't see the point in spending as much to make an untrustworthy enclosure as it'd take to make a reasonably trustworthy one, ESPECIALLY if your feeling is "oh well they're just poultry and I can easily enough get some new ones".
If you feel your cleverness and your knowledge of theoretical animal behavior is really that reliable and truly want to build this thing, by all means do so.
Just, don't say we didn't tell ya so, when it turns out to have been kind of a waste of time and money and material.
Good luck, bon voyage,
Pat
Well jeez, if you are just trying to usually have "some" survivor(s) of an attack, why are you going to all this trouble?
Honestly, I don't see the point in spending as much to make an untrustworthy enclosure as it'd take to make a reasonably trustworthy one, ESPECIALLY if your feeling is "oh well they're just poultry and I can easily enough get some new ones".
If you feel your cleverness and your knowledge of theoretical animal behavior is really that reliable and truly want to build this thing, by all means do so.
Just, don't say we didn't tell ya so, when it turns out to have been kind of a waste of time and money and material.
Good luck, bon voyage,
Pat