- Apr 19, 2009
- 4,203
- 171
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I didn't think I'd been gone that long but...
... ya'll have been chatty! LOL!
Taprock - I'm glad you're all okay. Tell your son the roo isn't necessarily a goner. We have several chickens who don't use the coop and just roost in the trees instead. The hardest thing for the roo will be food in the winter, but they can be pretty hardy. He may make it. For a while anyway.
Nova - That's definitely a roo.
HH - I agree with those that have suggested a rat. A possum is another possibility. Both like the easiest meal possible. Both are also capable of killing adult chickens if an easier meal isn't available though, so it'd be a good idea to double check any possible entrances and seal them up. Rats do drag off their food. Usually whatever they don't eat they will bury nearby. Whatever it is, if it comes back and takes a chicken you'll know. Possums tend to ravage their kills, while rats are a little more pointed in their approach. They leave behind a lot of the same signs as weasels and minks -- attacking the neck and head most often.

Taprock - I'm glad you're all okay. Tell your son the roo isn't necessarily a goner. We have several chickens who don't use the coop and just roost in the trees instead. The hardest thing for the roo will be food in the winter, but they can be pretty hardy. He may make it. For a while anyway.
Nova - That's definitely a roo.
HH - I agree with those that have suggested a rat. A possum is another possibility. Both like the easiest meal possible. Both are also capable of killing adult chickens if an easier meal isn't available though, so it'd be a good idea to double check any possible entrances and seal them up. Rats do drag off their food. Usually whatever they don't eat they will bury nearby. Whatever it is, if it comes back and takes a chicken you'll know. Possums tend to ravage their kills, while rats are a little more pointed in their approach. They leave behind a lot of the same signs as weasels and minks -- attacking the neck and head most often.