Hey there, sorry to quote the whole story. I have been researching Opossums and they are not an 'Attack", type of creature. They feed on easy pickins and a great job of cleaning up human messes. They are so slow, as you know, almost sloth like, it's hard to believe they would kill a chicken. They are known not to predate but eat carrion. If you worry about Foxes, Weasels, and Raccoons, the possums are the least of the worries.
I agree. I mentioned to Opossums because of the many piles of scat I found in the area. I was trying to get an understanding if the scat could have been from a big Opossum. There were many, many piles, all with a lot of seeds in them. The make up of the scat could have been either fox, raccoon or fox. I know raccoons do have latrines, but don't know the characteristics of a raccoon latrine. I also don't know if an Opossum or fox could leave so many piles in such a small area. It seemed to be spread over a 20 x 20 foot area.
I think I've identified my culprit (or one of them). We had inches of rain over a couple of days and what I finally identified as a raccoon left a lot of prints on the roof of the egg boxes. I hope I also don't have a fox because I think I can deal with a raccoon.
I did buy a really big humane trap, but haven't seen evidence of the raccoon coming back. S/he was coming back climbing all over the little hutch every night (as evidenced by new muddy tracks) but seems to have stopped. I kept wetting the ground around the coop/hutch at night to monitor (it would leave muddy tracks) but I haven't seen evidence it has been around since. It's also dried out and I haven't wet the ground for awhile, just made sure my coops are extra secure. Maybe the road got it. Or my neighbor. The scat pile was just across the fence on my neighbor's property and she has a lot of chickens, too.
The raccoon may not be the main culprit. It might just be a coincidence one was trying to get my chickens. S/he might always have been around watching and trying, but I only noticed when had a lot of rain and saw the tracks. After all, predators are everywhere. I live in the country just outside of the city. The houses are all on from two to five acre lots, not farmland. Lots of live oak and Ashe juniper bush. I've seen fox often near my home. They're there, just not sure they want to come on my property with all my dogs.
I did get a scare the other day. It was late afternoon and one of my pullets, just about laying age, was on the other side of the fence in my neighbor's property. That area is just left wild with tall grass and bush. It was where i found feather poofs from the two cockerels and where the little Silkie hen had been dragged. As I looked past the pullet, I saw two pointy ears and what looked like the pointy muzzle of a grey fox peeping through the grass about 30/40 yards from the fence line. I popped over the fence while the predator watched. Finally, it turned and ran away and was not a fox but a cat. Whew!
I don't believe in removing predators from their natural habitat just because I happened to move in to THEIR backyard with chickens. If I remove one, another will just move in to fill the empty space in the ecosystem. I don't know what I will do if I find a wily fox determined to get my chickens which free range (Silkies are in my back yard, and the Ameraucanas are in the two-acre fenced yard.
Thanks for all your help.