Long post...sorry!
We're on about 4 acres in a rural area, in an "association" of 26 properties of 3 to 5 acres. My place is on the boundary with another such association. We're zoned light ag, with many folks having horses, cows, alpacas, many just country-wannabes. We just have chickens and way too many gophers.
A pack of dogs was roaming and being fed by the nearest neighbor of the adjacent association. Besides messing in the yard, they were terrorizing our dog and cat, and, if you can believe it, one of them "stole" a 20 ft. length of 4" PVC irrigation pipe - dragged it towards his home, almost off the property so we did recover it. I saw Where the dog went home and confronted the owner. When I asked if she owned a big yellow lad, she got this funny look ans said, "yeeessss...and what did he do now?"
I called the sheriff about the pack (didn't mention the lab). The deputy said that the law was such that if I or any of my animals were even intimidated by a dog, shoot it, leave it lay, call the sheriff and they'd take it from there. Not long after the sheriff went by and talked to the neighbor, the pack of dogs dispersed and we never had the problem again. That neighbor has moved away. However...
Same association, different "neighbor"! We had a small"5'x7' pen in the back yard to get our ten six-week old australorps out for a little fresh air each day. Their dog dug under the fence killed all ten and I saw him drag one home. I confronted the owners and they admitted he'd brought a small black chicken home and apologized that they had him in a kennel but couldn't keep him in since he dug out every time. The offered to pay for the loss, but I declined and told them what the deputy had told me, and that the next time I saw them around my chickens, I'd shoot him. There IS a leash law in this county.
Fast forward a year or so... We were free ranging our hens (from the flock that replaced the dog-killed ones) and were away for the weekend. Our (good) neighbor was letting them out in the morning and locking them in at night. Apparently a hawk got one and badly injured it. The neighbor did all she could and saved it. We nursed it along, but eventually it stopped eating and wasted away till we finally put her down.
Shortly after we lost another to an unknown predator, but saw where the trail of feathers were headed. Within a week, we saw the remains of chickens - not ours - in our back field. Coincidentally, our field is nearest the two dog-owner neighbors in the adjacent association mentioned above.
Not long after that, I was sitting in the living room with windows facing my barn when I saw another (good) neighbor racing down my driveway on his 4-wheeler. He went straight to my barn where my coop and pen are and by the time I got halfway there, a dog ran by me. I guessed at what happened and went for my .410 shotgun. I took a long shot and missed, but watched where the dog went...toward the 10-chicken killer dog home.
What had happened was my neighbor was working outside and heard my four (down from six) hens making a ruckus, and came to investigate. He saw the dog in the pen attacking the hens and ran it off. It had dug and forced its way under the fence of the pen.
I called the sheriff and they came right out. They took pics of the place where the dog dug under and of the injured hens. I took them to the back yard and pointed out the location of where I saw the dog headed and told them the past history as above, and pointed out where my (good) neighbor lives who probably saved my flock.
They went over and confronted the dog owner, took a picture of the dog and showed it to my (good) neighbor who confirmed that was the dog. The owner was cited for "dangerous dog" and told the choice was to pay the fine (don't know how much) or go to court and contest it. But, the evidence was pretty convincing with the pictures and a witness. I don't know how it was resolved.
We nursed the worst injured hen for weeks, but she quit eating and got weaker till we finally put her down.
We haven't been free ranging them since unless we are working outside and can keep an eye on them.
A final important point...when the deputies were here for the last incident, I told them what the deputy had told me the first time with the dog pack. This deputy confirmed that, but said to make sure the dog was on my property when I shot it. There were cases where the dog owner sued on the basis that the dog was not on the shooter's property and that the shooter was not protecting his animals, but shooting the dog in revenge, and won the case!
Don't know what it's like where you are, but that's the way it is here (SE Washington State).
Optiker
We're on about 4 acres in a rural area, in an "association" of 26 properties of 3 to 5 acres. My place is on the boundary with another such association. We're zoned light ag, with many folks having horses, cows, alpacas, many just country-wannabes. We just have chickens and way too many gophers.
A pack of dogs was roaming and being fed by the nearest neighbor of the adjacent association. Besides messing in the yard, they were terrorizing our dog and cat, and, if you can believe it, one of them "stole" a 20 ft. length of 4" PVC irrigation pipe - dragged it towards his home, almost off the property so we did recover it. I saw Where the dog went home and confronted the owner. When I asked if she owned a big yellow lad, she got this funny look ans said, "yeeessss...and what did he do now?"
I called the sheriff about the pack (didn't mention the lab). The deputy said that the law was such that if I or any of my animals were even intimidated by a dog, shoot it, leave it lay, call the sheriff and they'd take it from there. Not long after the sheriff went by and talked to the neighbor, the pack of dogs dispersed and we never had the problem again. That neighbor has moved away. However...
Same association, different "neighbor"! We had a small"5'x7' pen in the back yard to get our ten six-week old australorps out for a little fresh air each day. Their dog dug under the fence killed all ten and I saw him drag one home. I confronted the owners and they admitted he'd brought a small black chicken home and apologized that they had him in a kennel but couldn't keep him in since he dug out every time. The offered to pay for the loss, but I declined and told them what the deputy had told me, and that the next time I saw them around my chickens, I'd shoot him. There IS a leash law in this county.
Fast forward a year or so... We were free ranging our hens (from the flock that replaced the dog-killed ones) and were away for the weekend. Our (good) neighbor was letting them out in the morning and locking them in at night. Apparently a hawk got one and badly injured it. The neighbor did all she could and saved it. We nursed it along, but eventually it stopped eating and wasted away till we finally put her down.
Shortly after we lost another to an unknown predator, but saw where the trail of feathers were headed. Within a week, we saw the remains of chickens - not ours - in our back field. Coincidentally, our field is nearest the two dog-owner neighbors in the adjacent association mentioned above.
Not long after that, I was sitting in the living room with windows facing my barn when I saw another (good) neighbor racing down my driveway on his 4-wheeler. He went straight to my barn where my coop and pen are and by the time I got halfway there, a dog ran by me. I guessed at what happened and went for my .410 shotgun. I took a long shot and missed, but watched where the dog went...toward the 10-chicken killer dog home.
What had happened was my neighbor was working outside and heard my four (down from six) hens making a ruckus, and came to investigate. He saw the dog in the pen attacking the hens and ran it off. It had dug and forced its way under the fence of the pen.
I called the sheriff and they came right out. They took pics of the place where the dog dug under and of the injured hens. I took them to the back yard and pointed out the location of where I saw the dog headed and told them the past history as above, and pointed out where my (good) neighbor lives who probably saved my flock.
They went over and confronted the dog owner, took a picture of the dog and showed it to my (good) neighbor who confirmed that was the dog. The owner was cited for "dangerous dog" and told the choice was to pay the fine (don't know how much) or go to court and contest it. But, the evidence was pretty convincing with the pictures and a witness. I don't know how it was resolved.
We nursed the worst injured hen for weeks, but she quit eating and got weaker till we finally put her down.
We haven't been free ranging them since unless we are working outside and can keep an eye on them.
A final important point...when the deputies were here for the last incident, I told them what the deputy had told me the first time with the dog pack. This deputy confirmed that, but said to make sure the dog was on my property when I shot it. There were cases where the dog owner sued on the basis that the dog was not on the shooter's property and that the shooter was not protecting his animals, but shooting the dog in revenge, and won the case!
Don't know what it's like where you are, but that's the way it is here (SE Washington State).
Optiker
Last edited: