No, it's because the little monsters are after my strawberry bushes. Again.Bottom line is if they are going over the fence there is a problem and it is not because they have feathers on their wing/s!
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No, it's because the little monsters are after my strawberry bushes. Again.Bottom line is if they are going over the fence there is a problem and it is not because they have feathers on their wing/s!
Properly clipping "a wing" can be a good "tool"
I free range all day, dawn to dark, with the coop locked up at night. I have 30 acres of trees, some 60-80 feet tall, with branches they could easily reach. But my birds like their spacious well ventilated and safe coop! I too have owls,,,
Do I have any birds that have a clipped wing?
Well yes, I have 2 GEMs that took flight, they were getting 20-30 feet in the air and flying around the farm. It was odd to watch them go through an open gate some 25 feet above it, and they never went outside their run.
Actually is was very cool to see, yet all I could think was they were going to get grabbed in mid flight by the hawks. Or fly away and get lost,,, That night I clipped very lightly (no more than 3/4 of an inch) off their right wing. They have not been air-born since. Yet they will have no issues getting on/off the roost, or fleeing a predator.
I would be looking for a problem with the coop! Why do they NOT want to go in it? Too dark, to hot, to smelly, no room etc..
And Good Luck!
Note your resources. You should be stating those in the very beginning when making the assertions you made. Most backyard keepers cannot match them. People must be able to adapt to resources they have, not force approaches that work better in another setting. This is also about birds that are ideally confined to some location defined by boundaries on the ground. I assume GEM's are something other than chickens.
Bird species that rely more upon flight will be more impacted by asymmetry when engaging in sustained flight where endurance is normally an important consideration for carrying out a given flight. Even a slight reduction in flight performance can be a major issue when pursued by something like a hawk.
So have they tried and you were able to see they couldn't make it? Or they magically haven't tried?That night I clipped very lightly (no more than 3/4 of an inch) off their right wing. They have not been air-born since.
So have they tried and you were able to see they couldn't make it? Or they magically haven't tried?
Why did they insist on flying through an open gate? Were they not happy? Many birds don't see fences as a boundary... just an obstacle.
I think it's funny that you think a bird has to be "not happy" to engage in natural curios behaviors... including thinking the grass is greener on the other side.
If things are sooo bad in my pasture or coop why is it that only 1 or 2 out of 80+ birds behave that way??? They are individuals, with more inclination to see what's out there... that's it. They always come home to roost INSIDE the coop, in my situation. And I'm SURE there may be flock dynamics at play... but to just say "your coop or run MUST be the problem"... I'm gonna go ahead and agree to disagree on this issue and understand that when someone has something SET in their head... no amount of talking will ever convince them.
Yes, we might be able to put higher roost in the coop... I WON'T, I need to reach the birds at MY convenience. I keep them to keep ME happy in MY set up... and ANY bird who won't get with the program... WON'T need to worry about "predators"!![]()
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I’m confused as to why you keep commenting on this, not to sound aggressive at all. I’m genuinely interested. I’m fairly new to wing clipping, but it doesn’t seem too bad to me. If you do it right it should just be like a haircut that prevents flight, right? In my opinion, a chicken doesn’t need to fly in order to be happy. Again, in my opinion, a chicken flying out of its designated area doesn’t mean that anything is necessarily wrong, happy and well cared for dogs run away from home all the time going after a squirrel or what not. I’m truly not trying to come off as a jerk, sorry if the first part sounded that way.And yours would be a totally different situation than the person i was talking to.
Why did they fly over the open gate, IDK
"I think it's funny that you think a bird has to be "not happy" to engage in natural curios behaviors... including thinking the grass is greener on the other side."
That is nit what I said.
"If things are sooo bad in my pasture or coop why is it that only 1 or 2 out of 80+ birds behave that way???"
I also did not say that to you.
I’m confused as to why you keep commenting on this, not to sound aggressive at all. I’m genuinely interested. I’m fairly new to wing clipping, but it doesn’t seem too bad to me. If you do it right it should just be like a haircut that prevents flight, right?
In my opinion, a chicken doesn’t need to fly in order to be happy. Again, in my opinion, a chicken flying out of its designated area doesn’t mean that anything is necessarily wrong, happy and well cared for dogs run away from home all the time going after a squirrel or what not. I’m truly not trying to come off as a jerk, sorry if the first part sounded that way.