looks like i'll be sitting around with a 22 on the weekends ........

kentucky jay

In the Brooder
9 Years
Dec 16, 2010
79
8
41
KENTUCKY
i went out to feed my chickens , last night ......i saw to yellow eyes reflecting in my headlamp beam !!!!!!! not sure what it is , but i bet it wants my chickens !!!!!!!!! i got 5 ,10 round magazines for that critter !!!!!!!!!! i'll set a trapp or two for during the week !!!!
 
my live trap stays set 365 days a year....sometimes, it'll go for months without being tripped....but caught another big male oppossum last night .....he's in oppossum heaven now
 
I purchased a Nite-Guard 3 or so years ago & my predator situation stopped. It's a solar powered red flashing light that the critters see as a predators eye reflection. They are about $30, so for the back of the barn, I have a junk VCR that the only thing that works on it is the red flashing light. If I see them in the daylight, they meet my .22 mag.
 
I had a similar scenario last night when I locked up my coop. Looks like the coyotes are back in my neck of the woods. I don't worry about shooting them, though. I have a coop and run built like a tank with a perimeter of electric netting. I dare the coyotes to try to breach my set-up. I'll be listening from the nice, warm house to the howls of pain and outrage when they meet the fence.
wink.png


Happy hunting, kentucky jay.
 
Quote:
Me too!! I purchased one of these and I do believe it keeps the predators at bay. We accidently put it to the test. We forgot to shut the door to the run after the girls had settled in for the night. The next day I found a huge Opossum about 50' from the opened door huddled in an old tire. It had all night to enter my chicken's run but didn't. I'm gonna buy another and another and place them at different locations.
thumbsup.gif
 
"Different species have different kinds of a tapetum, which is the reflective layer under the retinal pigment epithelium. In some species (cats and dogs) it is in cells with zinc-rich rods that are spaced (from memory) half a wavelength of light apart. Cats have a big tapetum since they are nocturnal, and dogs a small one. Other species (sheep, cattle and horses) have an extracellular tapetum composed of collagen laid in orthogonal arrays. This gives rise to different reflective hues. Any disease in the overlying sensory or nonsensory retina will have an effect on the reflectivity of the tapetum. Increased reflectivity is one of the standard criteria for retinal atrophy in domestic animals.

The tapetum is an astonishing and intriguing biological structures to look at, especially with an electron microscope."
What kind of animal eye colors at night have you seen?
Deer appear white
Cats look green
Foxes have been red
Raccoons and possums have looked reddish green
Bigfoot reputably red
Chupacabras and werewolves are yellow.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom