Appalachickens
Songster
Suddenly I’m imagining all sorts of Wile E. Coyote methods of capturing them.Long-handled net at night?
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Suddenly I’m imagining all sorts of Wile E. Coyote methods of capturing them.Long-handled net at night?
Observe them at dusk, watch where they roost, grab them swiftly around the legs after dark. The good news about this particular situation is that the toughest survivalists will be the final chickens remainingNo doubt! I was tempted but have no idea how I’d actually do it.
Is a snake a possibility? Chicks gone without a trace.Opinion question. I got the 25 chicks 2 weeks ago. I put 15 in the brooder and gave my broody 10. She's down to 3.
I'm not sure what's getting them. I suspect something in the coop at night, because she nested with four yesterday evening and came out of the coop this morning with three.
I've only found one dead in the coop, so it's only a guess.
I'm torn between setting up game cams to see if I can identify the culprit (which puts the remaining 3 at risk) or moving her and the babies into a sealed brooder in another area of the yard tonight.
She has been sticking close to the coop, something I've never seen her do before. As far as I know, she hasn't taken the babies out foraging yet, and she usually has them well trained by this time. She's also been moving around in the coop, never nesting in the same place two nights in a row.
Maybe something has her spooked?
What do you think? Move her and keep her locked in for a few days or let nature take its course?
A definite possibility, but I check the coop every night before I close up. Any snake large enough to get a chick shouldn't be able to get in after the door is closed. There have certainly been no snakes inside when I open up in the morning.Is a snake a possibility? Chicks gone without a trace.