need kick in the pants and/or support, for starting free-ranging :P

How long have they been in the coop where you want them to sleep? Once they think of it as home, they should return there at night, but if you have recently moved them, they can easily get confused. I've had some in a tractor for about 4 weeks and they sometimes want to roost in their old coop which now belongs to the 10 week olds. Usually they return to the tractor but not last night.

You are further north than me so your nightfall may be getting fairly late. Right now, mine return to the coop about 8:30. It is almost but just not quite dark then. I suspect you may not be waiting late enough for them to return on their own. The nervewracking thing is that it is dark very soon after they should return. If they don't make it back, panic city.

I find they are fairly consistent. The first time or two I let them out, a few cannot find the gate to the run. They wind up outside the run trying to find their way in but they have no clue. I have to walk them around the run fencing until they get to the gate. After a time or two, they do learn where the gate is. I had one SS that would walk right by the opening into the tractor even as I herded her past it. I finally had to herd her into my run where I could catch her. Are yours getting trapped behind fences or such that they can't find their way around?

I only let mine out in the evening when I am working outside in the garden until dark, not so much worrying about predators (although I do not trust the neighbor's dogs) but because they like to play in the road which is about 400 feet from the coop. I have never had a problem with them not trying to get back home at dusk.

You know I am not going to tell you that you are not going to have predator problems. My parents never locked their chickens up at night and let them roam at will during the day. They had pasture fields around them and were right next to a wooded area of many acres, several miles outside a small country town. We would often go several years in between a predator attack, even with the coop open at night. Then a fox or dog would find the flock and would have to be dealt with. The dog attack would be in the daytime and the fox right at dawn. We never had a problem with raccoons, possums, or skunks as far as the chickens went, although you would see them run over in the road, so you know they were all around. We had plenty of hawks and owls too. You may have a predator attack the next time you let them out or it may be several years. I sure can't predict it.

I don't know if this helps you any. As hard as it may be, it may be time for a bowl of vanilla ice cream, maybe with fresh strawberries, and see what happens if you leave them on their own a bit.
 
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I should not have said "roo", he is just a cockerel, I guess he'd be about 14 wks old now or so - he has only recently begun living fulltime with the hens (his choice, not mine - he made a hole in the divider between their pens and kept 'visiting' and now he stays there)... honestly he is the one I think is the *likeliest* to wander off and not return, just because he is young and clueless. Although he does seem to want to do what the Big Girls are doing.

And we DO get daytime raccoons -- I've seen them in the yard as early as 4 pm. this time of year.

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Always.

The problem is, I really don't want to just leave the coop door open til whenever they go in, because it's the same building as all the other chickens and turkeys and if a raccoon got in there, it could be Messy. And it doesn't currently get dark here until about 9:30 by which time I am already in PJ's.

Trolling them in with treats is a good idea though, I am stupid for not thinking of that myself and it should work reasonably well, as they do understand my food call
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it may be time for a bowl of vanilla ice cream, maybe with fresh strawberries, and see what happens if you leave them on their own a bit.

Now THAT is excellent advice
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Maybe if I can't get them all rounded up at once, I could make a hardwarecloth substitute for their popdoor, and leave the run door open but the indoor popdoor closed with just the hardwarecloth, in hopes that any late stragglers would go hang out in the run, where at least they would be *more* safe from predators. And I suppose if I had to zwip out there in my PJs just before bed to close any latecomers in, I could do it. Although I'll have to find my mosquito hat and jacket, they are BAD here
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Thanks,

Pat​
 
I leave my run door open when they are free ranging, so the girls have access to the run/coop..........you can't do this?!? I see where this would be more of a gathering issue then, since the girls can't freely go on their own into the run when it gets dusk. Hence, the treats will come into play more to be used as a "gathering" method to get them to come to You, vs you tracking them down. When my girls see me walk to the coop with a red bucket, they know it's food, so they come a running. If they are scattered throughout the acreage, I then do a Here Chickie Chickie chant with my food bucket, get their attention and they come. You'll probably play around with it to make it work for you, I have faith that you can whip those chickens into doing it on your terms!!!
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No, I leave their pen's popdoors open -- but am unwilling to leave 'em open once it starts to get dusk-ish. Because anything gettin' in will have access to all my OTHER poultry as well.

Pat
 

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