Congratulations! It is always exciting when they come of age and begin adult production.
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My black and red pullet is now a hen. She laid a lovely egg yesterday. I found it this morning. Time to start watching fertility!
so many of you have lost many birds to predators. Sounds like LGF dogs are pretty much the answer to keeping chickens safe but have any of you tried electric netting and if you have, what has happened thereafter? Did this solve your problem long-term with the exception of flying predators? I put up some electric netting myself a few month ago and haven't lost any birds since. Prior to that, I was dealing with coons and a fox that was getting my free ranging birds in day time. Once I put up the fence, not a single bird has been lost to these predators. I hesitate to allow myself to believe it's really that good with as little time as I have been using it so wanted to know what results others have had who maybe have been using electric fencing a while. The fence can be a pain to deal with as it easily will sag without finding ways to stretch it and it never moves or folds as easily as they tell you it does but so far I'm willing to deal with these issues because it seems to have solved the predator issue.
they were not SFHs, but i have lost 4 birds in the past two weeks to a bobcat (mostly likely a mama with kittens nearby, since she's hanging around -- usually they hunt over a very large range & aren't so "resident" in one spot) & have had to stop all free-ranging outside their runs for now -- am thinking of trying some electrical fencing, but not sure how well it would work against a large cat?
It will deter. But it won't prevent assuredly.
Depends how the hunting is elsewhere and how motivated the cat is. ;-). Electric is worth the shock to many animals once they learn they can get past it and it quits on "the other side".