Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
My chickens and ducks free range for the most part. They are put in a coop at night. I use a fishing net to catch them but sometimes that doesn't always help. Anyone have any suggestions for it to be a bit easier? Thanks
Since I held our chickens a lot when they were chicks, they all (except the unsocial leghorns) come to the gate. The social birds for the most part let me just hold them without a chase. If your birds aren't like mine, softly walking up to them and grabbing them might work. Or, if they walk past you, snag them quickly. Hope that helps!
If you give them a little treat on the floor of their coop every evening when you go out to put them to bed, they'll come to expect it and be climbing all over themselves to get into that coop. I've started putting my flock to bed well before dusk. I get busy inside in the evening, and otherwise, may not get back outside until I may need a flashlight. My flock is fed in the morning, and again, mid-afternoon. So, they're ready for a bit more food in the evening. If you give them access to feed 24/7, this might not work for you. But, I purposefully only give them one meal at a time. It makes it much easier to manage them. It also makes my flock space less attractive to rodents. Very rarely, is it necessary for me to catch a single bird.
Just reading some aged threads on catching chickens. Yours was exceptionally funny with he rooster on the head.It's pretty bad when the rooster you're trying to catch, who is also skittish, decides to jump on your head to get away from you. At least he stayed there and didn't poop while I slowly walked to the coop looking like a rural Chiquita Banana girl.
Anymore I just get two big sticks (more long than thick) and herd them, get the dog to herd them or call 'here chick'. The only problem with 'here chick' is that the dumb guineas come and not the chickens. Absolutely backwards at my farm. It's like slapstick every day.