When my chickens are cooped up - they hate it, I feel guilty and they do get dust/respiratory problems - cant be helped. When they free range they are fat, healthy and get lots of fresh air and excercise - they are just happier healthier chickens.
Have I lost any - yes, I lost a chick just the other day in broad daylight to a coyote who came right into our yard - hubby was out back working, saw it all happen, gun was too far away in the house.
I've lost a couple of ducks to hawks, and at night (in the coop) I've lost two or three to coons.
The ones that died in the coop I felt guilt for - I fixed the coop problem, but I am not going to coop them up all day (unless I am trying to get pure bred eggs - this will happen for a couple of months for eggs, not all year - they have runs to go into then).
Why? The same reason I allow my sons to grow up and move out on their own and make their own mistakes.
What sort of life is it if you are always "safe"? Life isn't safe, and a purely protected safe life is no life at all, IMO. Would you want someone to let you out once a day, supervised, and then leave you locked inside all day otherwise?
I understand we all have different opinions, and whatever you do with your chickens is fine for you - for me, however, I will keep on free ranging, and if one gets killed now and then - it's the cycle of life - coyotes and hawks need to eat also, I guess sad
Some people live where they cannot free range, this is fine for them also.
I am wondering what the ratio is for predator deaths as opposed to disease deaths on here....
WOW!! Well said. I am a free ranger too. I think in general, we live in an overly sanitized world, a world so focused on "safety" that we miss out on much of the richness of life. For me and my poultry and my farm and my family, freedom trumps safety--within reason, of course. I do still lock the ducks up tight at night, and my kids use safety seats in the car, and the goats are fenced unless we're out there with them... but the ducks free range during the day, the goats run loose with the human kids when we're home with them... and the human kids ride their bikes in the (residential, dead-end) street, sometimes even unsupervised (
).
But I also FULLY agree that the balance between security and safety must be determined for each person and family according to that family's own needs, comfort levels, and priorities. So if one person keeps their chickens locked up full time and escorts their children every moment of the day, that's their prerogative and I have no problem with that. It's just not how I choose to run my family.