Here’s my situation. I have a free range flock of around 110 head of adult and juvenile birds. Mostly red jungle fowl hybrids, but also mixed layers and guineafowl. My birds free range from dawn to dusk. 40 acres, mostly blueberry fields but also lots of woods. Surrounded by thousands of acres of woods. Every predator native to my part of Florida is present minus Florida panthers and unconfirmed whether weasels or minks are present.
I generally don’t lose adult birds between the alertness of my jungle fowl and my free range dogs. 1 hen to a hawk, 1 guinea to a snake, 1 guinea likely to a bobcat. That’s all in a year’s time Once in a while I lose a bitty or too but I figure that’s par for the course. Sometimes even bullfrogs and bass make attempts on them at waterside. Most bitties make it to adulthood without my intervention.
Several weeks ago I had a hatch of 25 jungle fowl bitties between 2 hens. The hens abandoned the bitties after about a month. They finned for themselves and I’d steadily lose 1-3 chicks a day several days in a row. Finally the last 5 proved to be resilient and they’re holding on. But I couldn’t diagnose a particular predator to save my life. All I could do was narrow the time frame down to daylight hours when the bitties would be taken. I also noted the adults generally stayed calm and showed no obvious signs of a predator hanging about. No sign of disease. Just disappearing bitties. The bitties did seem very weary of the sky and stuck to cover but the other chickens did not.
So recently I turned loose some guinea keets. Several weeks old, about the size of my hand to fingertips. One disappeared on day 2 of free ranging. A second had a wounded leg the same day the first disappeared. I gathered them up and penned them for a couple more weeks then turned them out again. A third disappeared after day 4 or 5 of free ranging, then appeared this morning with wounded legs. I actually cant find the wounds. Just that it hobbles. Like something had ahold of it and it struggled free. It must have spent yesterday laid up somewhere recuperating.
I can’t imagine a predator that can so efficiently take multiple chicks every day but struggles with larger guinea keets and can be so stealthy that I never see it.
Crow live constantly over my coop and the blueberry fields where the chicks run. I let them be because I figure they keep hawks at bay. But they always hang out with the chicken flock. This started about the time chicks began disappearing.
I never asked myself what the crows were getting out of the arrangement. They don’t have access to feed or eggs.
What does crow predation look like?
I generally don’t lose adult birds between the alertness of my jungle fowl and my free range dogs. 1 hen to a hawk, 1 guinea to a snake, 1 guinea likely to a bobcat. That’s all in a year’s time Once in a while I lose a bitty or too but I figure that’s par for the course. Sometimes even bullfrogs and bass make attempts on them at waterside. Most bitties make it to adulthood without my intervention.
Several weeks ago I had a hatch of 25 jungle fowl bitties between 2 hens. The hens abandoned the bitties after about a month. They finned for themselves and I’d steadily lose 1-3 chicks a day several days in a row. Finally the last 5 proved to be resilient and they’re holding on. But I couldn’t diagnose a particular predator to save my life. All I could do was narrow the time frame down to daylight hours when the bitties would be taken. I also noted the adults generally stayed calm and showed no obvious signs of a predator hanging about. No sign of disease. Just disappearing bitties. The bitties did seem very weary of the sky and stuck to cover but the other chickens did not.
So recently I turned loose some guinea keets. Several weeks old, about the size of my hand to fingertips. One disappeared on day 2 of free ranging. A second had a wounded leg the same day the first disappeared. I gathered them up and penned them for a couple more weeks then turned them out again. A third disappeared after day 4 or 5 of free ranging, then appeared this morning with wounded legs. I actually cant find the wounds. Just that it hobbles. Like something had ahold of it and it struggled free. It must have spent yesterday laid up somewhere recuperating.
I can’t imagine a predator that can so efficiently take multiple chicks every day but struggles with larger guinea keets and can be so stealthy that I never see it.
Crow live constantly over my coop and the blueberry fields where the chicks run. I let them be because I figure they keep hawks at bay. But they always hang out with the chicken flock. This started about the time chicks began disappearing.
I never asked myself what the crows were getting out of the arrangement. They don’t have access to feed or eggs.
What does crow predation look like?