coyotes. They have sharp teeth, claws, and LOVE eating chickens.
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Foxes are often neighborhood pests that don't show up until someone gets chickens.
A full grown mink can squeeze in a 1 1/2 inch crack. I don't know all the particulars on the attack, but minks suck blood and don't eat the flesh much. They attack the neck area 99 % of the time.
A opossum or coon will kill and eat, where a mink is territorial and will kill small critters in its territory just for sport. A dog or fox will do large kills also, but they eat or leave with chickens.
My best defense after loosing 25 birds in two nights, have been a loud radio playing 24/7/365, well secured pen, a well lit yard, and walking my dogs to put urine scent around the yard.
Wild animals don't like going around dogs, or loud noises.
The hens have learned to LIVE with the music, and seem to relax and lay more eggs...
coat them with bag balm or vaselineYeah I wondered if it would do that. I really don't see it working over a whole coop but maaaybe if the roost area was off to one side like in a bigger coop. I've got a leghorn roo and an ancona roo that I am wondering about how their comb and wattles will do this winter. Their's are huge. I am going to get a couple new indoor/outdoor thermometors so I can keep an eye on the temp and humidity in the coops.