- Jan 5, 2012
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I worded that kind of strange. I meant you need to be able to kill it quickly. Poisoning doesn't kill it quickly. I thought it was ironic that someone could poison something to death but not shoot it.
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I agree. If anyone is ever missing a bird during daylight IMO always assume it's a fox. I have tons of raccoons here and have no real proof that one has killed any of my chickens.Daylight? Camp out with light rifle starting an hour before time clock it visited today. Be prepared to see fox or coyote.
Would a raccoon be in the same territory as a fox or a coyote?
We just had a mama raccoon with babies attack and kill one of my chickens right in the coop a few weeks ago. Well, I should say that that's what we THINK killed her. DH saw the babies wandering around looking lost (my chickens free range), and found a pile of feathers in the coop during the day. Next morning, our dog had cornered the raccoon family near the coop - in the morning, during daylight hours. DH eliminated the problem and the little future problems, and we have not had any more incidents. What I'm thinking may have happened, was the family was looking for feed and found chickens instead. Mama coon cornered Mama hen and Mama coon won. Just a theory, of course. Raccoons are not just night time predators. They are opportunists and will eat what they can, when they can.I agree. If anyone is ever missing a bird during daylight IMO always assume it's a fox. I have tons of raccoons here and have no real proof that one has killed any of my chickens.