Opossum Attack

rod5591

Songster
7 Years
Oct 15, 2017
351
427
226
Cookeville TN
Tonight 11pm my dog woke me up to go outside. While outside waiting for her I heard a commotion in the open shed where some of my older hens roost. I got flashlight and a stick and went into the chicken yard to find one of my hens in the yard acting nervous and distressed. I looked in the shed and saw a handful of chest feathers on the ground, then lurking in the corner perched on a cinder block was a possum. I am still in my PJs and it’s been real wet so footing is slippery. I used the stick to chase the possum into the hollow of the cinder block and I piled bricks on top of him to hold him down. Tomorrow morning I will go out and shoot it, if it’s still alive. I don’t like making an animal suffer overnight punned down in a hole by bricks and rocks, but to dispatch him now, at night, in the mud, I might wind up slipping in the mud and putting a bullet into my own foot instead of the possum. At nearly age 70 I am not as agile as I used to be. The hen it attacked was a broody hen trying to hatch some eggs in late summer. It was attacked in a nest box where she was sitting on 4 eggs. No blood that I could see, and after recovering it’s senses, the attacked hen hopped on one of the other henhouses and then up into the Douglas fir tree that most of my birds roost in. We lost another hen about a month ago- I wonder if this same possum was the culprit. I hope I don’t wake up tomorrow to find that it dug it’s way out of that hole, but I don’t think it will. We shall see.
 
Tonight 11pm my dog woke me up to go outside. While outside waiting for her I heard a commotion in the open shed where some of my older hens roost. I got flashlight and a stick and went into the chicken yard to find one of my hens in the yard acting nervous and distressed. I looked in the shed and saw a handful of chest feathers on the ground, then lurking in the corner perched on a cinder block was a possum. I am still in my PJs and it’s been real wet so footing is slippery. I used the stick to chase the possum into the hollow of the cinder block and I piled bricks on top of him to hold him down. Tomorrow morning I will go out and shoot it, if it’s still alive. I don’t like making an animal suffer overnight punned down in a hole by bricks and rocks, but to dispatch him now, at night, in the mud, I might wind up slipping in the mud and putting a bullet into my own foot instead of the possum. At nearly age 70 I am not as agile as I used to be. The hen it attacked was a broody hen trying to hatch some eggs in late summer. It was attacked in a nest box where she was sitting on 4 eggs. No blood that I could see, and after recovering it’s senses, the attacked hen hopped on one of the other henhouses and then up into the Douglas fir tree that most of my birds roost in. We lost another hen about a month ago- I wonder if this same possum was the culprit. I hope I don’t wake up tomorrow to find that it dug it’s way out of that hole, but I don’t think it will. We shall see.
I can still remember my dad jumping up and waking up everyone in the house to rescue his chickens from predators. They roosted in trees too. Mine will serve a life sentence behind bars and hopefully live out their life underneath a tree instead of in one.I wish you the best with that possum in the morning . LOL
 
Tonight 11pm my dog woke me up to go outside. While outside waiting for her I heard a commotion in the open shed where some of my older hens roost. I got flashlight and a stick and went into the chicken yard to find one of my hens in the yard acting nervous and distressed. I looked in the shed and saw a handful of chest feathers on the ground, then lurking in the corner perched on a cinder block was a possum. I am still in my PJs and it’s been real wet so footing is slippery. I used the stick to chase the possum into the hollow of the cinder block and I piled bricks on top of him to hold him down. Tomorrow morning I will go out and shoot it, if it’s still alive. I don’t like making an animal suffer overnight punned down in a hole by bricks and rocks, but to dispatch him now, at night, in the mud, I might wind up slipping in the mud and putting a bullet into my own foot instead of the possum. At nearly age 70 I am not as agile as I used to be. The hen it attacked was a broody hen trying to hatch some eggs in late summer. It was attacked in a nest box where she was sitting on 4 eggs. No blood that I could see, and after recovering it’s senses, the attacked hen hopped on one of the other henhouses and then up into the Douglas fir tree that most of my birds roost in. We lost another hen about a month ago- I wonder if this same possum was the culprit. I hope I don’t wake up tomorrow to find that it dug it’s way out of that hole, but I don’t think it will. We shall see.
This morning I dispatched the possum. The attacked hen seems OK- actually I am not able to identify which hen was attacked—she was one of four 18 month old Noir Marans. None of them show any signs of attack that I can see today.
 
Tonight 11pm my dog woke me up to go outside. While outside waiting for her I heard a commotion in the open shed where some of my older hens roost. I got flashlight and a stick and went into the chicken yard to find one of my hens in the yard acting nervous and distressed. I looked in the shed and saw a handful of chest feathers on the ground, then lurking in the corner perched on a cinder block was a possum. I am still in my PJs and it’s been real wet so footing is slippery. I used the stick to chase the possum into the hollow of the cinder block and I piled bricks on top of him to hold him down. Tomorrow morning I will go out and shoot it, if it’s still alive. I don’t like making an animal suffer overnight punned down in a hole by bricks and rocks, but to dispatch him now, at night, in the mud, I might wind up slipping in the mud and putting a bullet into my own foot instead of the possum. At nearly age 70 I am not as agile as I used to be. The hen it attacked was a broody hen trying to hatch some eggs in late summer. It was attacked in a nest box where she was sitting on 4 eggs. No blood that I could see, and after recovering it’s senses, the attacked hen hopped on one of the other henhouses and then up into the Douglas fir tree that most of my birds roost in. We lost another hen about a month ago- I wonder if this same possum was the culprit. I hope I don’t wake up tomorrow to find that it dug it’s way out of that hole, but I don’t think it will. We shall see.
It was in the open shed where your older hens roost? 🧐 You don’t close up your older hens at night?
 
Did a search and found this thread.....I went out to feed my birds this morning and heard A LOT OF NOISE and when I went inside I saw the Possum! It had just finished eating one of my doves, and was after one of my Polish chickens. I rescued the chicken who is happily fine.
The possum was cornered behind a crate and I managed to coax it into an empty small garbage can. I euthanized it with an ether soaked rag thrown into the can and the lid locked on. I've had this bird house for the last 5 years and this is my first Possum experience, plenty of mice but never this critter. What an experience!!!
Now I need to do a security sweep along the bottom boards to see how it got in
 

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