Now I'm dealing with excessive heat and one of my hens is not doing well. I'm going to post on the other forum. However, the interesting thing about the bully is that she is at the bottom of the pecking order in her flock. Go figure!
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.
All the pallet and plywood obstacles are great ideas, a few other things I've found that helped, was to have plenty of perches in the run. There is not only the square footage of the run, but when you add vertical places, there is more places. I have hung burlap under roosts in the run, like curtains just to block vision. If you keep it 4" or 6" off the ground, you can sort of make a maze that is not a trap - smaller birds learn quick, they can slip under the curtain, or two, and disappear. Like someone else said "bowing to the Queen" they really don't need so much extra room, as they just need to get out of sight. A loose collection of branches and sticks in a somewhat of a pile works good too. Loose enough there are plenty of places birds can slip through, more places for small birds than big ones. I know it's the wrong time of year, but a used Xmas tree works great on it's side.Thanks so much, Mrs. K! I feel reassured and will look into pin-less peepers. I'm thinking now that I will take the animal cage out of the coop and create a safe corner for the newbies instead. However, they rely heavily on the cage for safety at the moment (they fly to the top), and now the bully lives in the cage whenever the flock is closed in, so I am hesitating a bit to get rid of the cage. It's been 3 days now of locking the bully up in the cage whenever the chickens are in the run. The bully is not happy! Will locking her up for a few days and nights tame her a bit? I do let her out to free range so she is not totally being sequestered.
Do you have any pics of Your coop/run with pallets or other constructed "walls?" I have 4 different vertical-space areas in my run (one a 3-step ladder, one a 2-step stool, one actual roost bar, and one tree branch roost bar in a corner), but nothing to block sight like you've mentioned. I'm introducing a young rooster (4 months old) to two veteran hens who recently lost their rooster and another hen to coyotes.Yes, exactly ^^^ what she is saying, they just need to break the line of sight. I have actually seen the confrontation, lower bird disappears and 30 seconds later is eating right beside the old biddy. She bowed, and that was enough.