Does the bobcat have the right to kill your livestock that you have done everything you are willing to do,(Price, labor). When does one have the right to say you failed because you decided to free range?I didn't expect this thread to spark such a lively and varied discussion, but it's very interesting, so I'm glad it did!
I can see both sides of the issue - hence my extreme hesitation to go after the bobcat, and my failure to do so even in the second year of predation. But I do believe that discussions of morality, as applied to predators, don't really have a place. Predators live solely by killing other animals, day in and day out. Hundreds, perhaps thousands of animals die terrifying, agonizing deaths at the jaws and claws of one single bobcat. If there is any moral code at play, as far as the bobcat, coyote, fox, etc. is concerned, it's only this:
Might makes right.
So because nature has evolved the predator to have the need and ability to kill numerous other animals to live, it has the moral right to do so, regardless of those other animals' desire (right?) to live?
If that's true, then by the same token, those animals that have evolved the ability to kill the predator have the right to do so as well. Might makes right.
Sure, the bobcat needs to eat animals to live. It has a whole forest of squirrels, birds, and other small animals to eat. If it comes to my land, despite the many warnings I've given it by chasing it away and stealing its would-be meals, and it persists in trying to kill my animals, then I have a "right" to kill it. Just the same as it has a "right" to kill whatever it can get its claws into.
For predators like the bobcat and me, might makes right.
I can say without a doubt my flock see me walking towards the coops and get so excited. They are expect to be let loose. They are definitely happier than the flock that has never seen outside the run fence.
I can make the argument, that your flock that you keep locked up is not as happy as mine. It's a valid discussion, is it not? Yes if they never get to experience the freedom, how can they be happy?
I get it, alive and safe but no freedom is what some do. I have a 5' fence that the coops are in patrolled by my dogs. Some are saying I'm negligent in security, and I should let losses happen, because they were here first.
Sorry, I bought the livestock. I paid the feed. I paid for the fencing.