Owls will visit a roost tree or snag right at dark near the previous nights kill. If it is an owl it will return. I have many pictures of them.
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It took one the first night, and one two nights later.
Chicken Tamer. it might not be cats....weasels will do this as well. We had a weasel get in this summer and kill 3 fat cornish while they just sat there. They get around the neck and basically make a small spot and it bleeds them out. They will for sport not for food. So if they didnt look like they had been eaten...it was probably a weasel type critter.
Leslie, I am thinking an owl or raccoon. Both are more clever than we think and eat the chickens like you have described.
Suggestion for all critters. Get a dog. Keep it close to your animals. At the time of the weasel incident, our Border Collie was being tied up on the other side of the coop to protect the little chicks at night. She usually had room to roam the whole area and we had never had any incidents of ay kind even when a fox came by and killed off a bunch of the neighbors hens and he's had hawks and owl problems too. But not us. (secret: Lucy probably wouldnt know what to do if she had defend anything...she is not an aggressive dog, however she will bark and she partols like crazy!)
I feed a mix of grains along side a pelleted feed. My mix is dried peas, soft wheat and corn. We buy the peas and wheat from Farmers directly out of the field and the corn from a mill. It goes from the combine directly into the back of our pick-up and we shovel it out into barrels. My chickens beak out the grains trying to get to what they consider is their "favorite" I suppose. They do not beak out the pellets, in fact they eat very little of the pellets. I just don't give them more feed until they have cleaned up the ground under the feeders. I have considered putting chicken wire or something like that over the feeders so they can not beak it out......... I think your feed idea is great, but it may not solve the problem of the beaking out............Okay Oregon Chicken Lovers ... someone on another thread suggested contacting a local feed mill to make a custom feed mix for chickens. There are lots of reasons why this might be a good idea, but it was suggested to me that feeding a mix of whole(r) grains is a way to help with the feed waste issue I'm currently having -- my chickens beaked 90 lbs of food onto the coop floor in one day.For various other reasons I've been thinking of doing this myself, but know feed mills must mix the feed in rather large batches (like 500 lbs at a time), and this would probably be more than is practical for me even though I do have a lot of chickens for a backyard chicken wrangler.![]()
The solution is so simple it is elegant: form a buying co-op to share the batches of feed.
My question is this: Is Anyone Interested? Feed mixed locally, from as many local, non-GMO, perhaps also organic, ingredients as is practical, with the rest of the nutrients shipped in.
Here is the recipe(s) for the feed that the BYC member pointed me toward. http://marystilwell.wordpress.com/2011/10/26/marys-whole-grain-chicken-feed-recipe/ This is just a starting-point recipe and we could tweak it according to our resources and needs.