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Gorgeous!
Feral cats have few natural enemies. They need to be kept in check, if the cat is in my coop once he will come back. Regardless of the reason we have feral cats and I agree with you on that. I will do what I have to do protect my birds.
Killing a feral cat is a shame but letting it live is a bigger shame. It will destroy baby birds, aka kill them. It will kill chipmunks, squirrels and other small animals and surely will kill chicks. It knows where the food source is now. Besides leaving this cat alive allows it to produce more feral cats. A feral cat lives about 3 years ( not a like a well cared for house cat). During that time they will have 3-4 litters a year with 4-6 kittens a time.
By not killing that cat you are turning loose 35 more feral cats in the first year alone, the babies have babies at 7-8 months.
I understand your feelings for the cat, but reason, to me says get rid of the cat, the sooner the better.
I do not take pleasure in a killing like this, but I would do it. My opinion and I understand yours may be different.
i would like to know just what free range is, i have chickens that are fenced in but i am told they are free rnge as i leave them out of house, here is what we have and this is on a 3 acre yard it is 30 x 60 ftA thread for all those people who keep chickens free range! Post, post, post!!
Rules:
1. No fighting! Everyone has their own opinion about everything.
2. There's nothing wrong with people who keep chickens indoors, and don't allow them to free range. This thread is to encourage those who don't free range their chickens, not drive them away. If you have any questions about converting to free range, you're welcome to ask questions here!
3. Have fun!
Yours would be considered free range by the marketing standards. I believe to be considered free range they have to have minimal access to out doors, like a tiny yard, for the eggs to be considered free range. In other words,not raised in a tiny cage. Many of us here let them roam totally free foe a good portion of their day, no fences or restrictions but also minimal protection. There are pros and cons. Edit to add you have a great set up!
i have 43 hens all laying, but i have 15 nests in one coop and 6 in the smaller coop, they most like the same box, we will get 15 eggs from one box, only get 3 or 4 from small coop and in same box.@fancychick1
Your situation sounds like mine! almost exactly! I have 6 nesting boxes but the 4 laying hens use the same one! they like laying the eggs together, but obviously one chicken at a time : )
i would get another fence and put it across the top of the fence makeing it higher.I don't want to Ralphie, just for the reasons you stated. I'll have to come up with an option though if they are going into that neighbors yard. The way my coop Is setup the run goes off to the left and uses the property line fence as one boundary. The reason for this is there is a large tree they like to hang out under and I have an electric fence creating a boundary around the front of the tree with a chute going behind some holly bushes for free range access. I may look at the property fence and see if I can make that section taller. The tree gets in the way. More research is required. I just hope they all come back.![]()
i would get another fence and put it across the top of the fence makeing it higher.