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I was going to say something in a similar vein: How tightly protected is your setup? Is your coop predator proof? I'm thinking maybe not. I don't know of squirrels attacking chickens, but now I'm worried for your girls (and guy)-- Some oppossums are not much bigger than squirrels.
We have 2 pop doors from the coop; one to the main run, which I think of as their safe yard. It's fenced-in, with netting over the top, and we're fairly sure it is predator-proof. The other leads to the smallish run, which also has a gate opening out to the big run. Even when our girls free-range, it's not completely free. We put up light fencing to keep them in or out of certain areas, and only let them out of the pen in the first place when we will be outside with them. It can all be a pain in the neck sometimes, but I know they are about as safe as we can make them.
(Also, we used to store the feed & scratch in the unused 2nd curbside recycling bin, but the squirrels started gnawing the cover, so we changed to a large cabinet/small shed, that was previously a mini-coop when our younger chicks were first able to be outside. Or I would recommend a covered metal container.)
I was going to say something in a similar vein: How tightly protected is your setup? Is your coop predator proof? I'm thinking maybe not. I don't know of squirrels attacking chickens, but now I'm worried for your girls (and guy)-- Some oppossums are not much bigger than squirrels.
We have 2 pop doors from the coop; one to the main run, which I think of as their safe yard. It's fenced-in, with netting over the top, and we're fairly sure it is predator-proof. The other leads to the smallish run, which also has a gate opening out to the big run. Even when our girls free-range, it's not completely free. We put up light fencing to keep them in or out of certain areas, and only let them out of the pen in the first place when we will be outside with them. It can all be a pain in the neck sometimes, but I know they are about as safe as we can make them.
(Also, we used to store the feed & scratch in the unused 2nd curbside recycling bin, but the squirrels started gnawing the cover, so we changed to a large cabinet/small shed, that was previously a mini-coop when our younger chicks were first able to be outside. Or I would recommend a covered metal container.)