Should I move my run away from the walnut tree?

Lazarus the chicken got herself out of a moving current. Of course that was 37 years ago back when chickens were real chickens and were used to scratching through 27 feet of snow to get a single seed and having to fly upwind both ways to reach the nest box which was invariably guarded by a starving wolf.
:gig

I have walnut trees too
I worry about chicks getting clobbered in the fall
 
Obviously chickens can swim but only within certain limits, which includes landing through surf or escaping a river. This whole debate reminds me of a post I saw on the fishing forum where some mysterious fishes washed up on the pacific beach in Oregon. ODFW identified them as freshwater bass that got flooded out of their lake into the ocean and perished in the salt. Monkeys can climb trees and can also get injured falling out of them. My question is, if Mini Me is tossing roosters in the drink at three, will it be dear ole dad by the time he turns ten?!
 
Obviously chickens can swim but only within certain limits, which includes landing through surf or escaping a river. This whole debate reminds me of a post I saw on the fishing forum where some mysterious fishes washed up on the pacific beach in Oregon. ODFW identified them as freshwater bass that got flooded out of their lake into the ocean and perished in the salt. Monkeys can climb trees and can also get injured falling out of them. My question is, if Mini Me is tossing roosters in the drink at three, will it be dear ole dad by the time he turns ten?!
:gig
 
View attachment 1883279 I will be building a new coop and run. Right now my run is under an old walnut tree. The chickens use it for shade. Will the used feed eventually kill the tree?

(Yes, my son caught the leghorn by himself.)
I'm going to digress from the great aquapoultrics debate of ot 19'. How long has the old coop been there? Any signs of stress on the tree? Walnuts seem to be pretty nitrogen loving, you should be OK. No so for many other kinds of trees. Side note, some walnuts release a chemical when they get stressed that kills off quite a few other plants, and they have really wide root spreads. Drought will stress them, I'd guess over fertilized might too? So if your shrubs 50 feet away start dying.....
 
My chickens live in my little orchard of 7 trees and a dozen or more berry bushes. Both the vegetation and the chickens love the arrangement. Any apples that fall on the ground are theirs as well as any low growing berries. They are little fertilizer makers. However, I should add I'm in Washington and it rains a lot here, so that may be in part why it works so well for us.
 

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