yesterday afternoon while outside with my chickens, having a little free range time, a sneaky fox came and took one of my chickens, the rooster tried to stop it, and lost his life for his efforts and the fox got away with my girl. i was 20 feet away.
i only have 5 buckshot shells, a friend will be bringing me more tomorrow. but i have the shotgun by the back door ready to go, and a .22 mag in the living room by the window, a 30-30 in the upstairs bathroom, 2 have-a-heart traps baited with (store bought) chicken legs, although i doubt i'll catch a fox with those, and at the edge of the property my better half (BH) set up 3 snap-him-in-half traps, so the cats are IN til this is over. the dog is a little mush who only gets walked.
about 2 hours after i lost my Lily and Barney, i found out that we have a new neighbor bit over a half mile away (next property down really...) who had lost one bird everyday for the last 4 days. wish i had known that they #1 lived there, #2 had birds, and #3 had experienced predators. the one other family living up here year round has ducks and geese. we always call each other when we spot something, so neither of us let our birds out...
my coop is wooden Amish built, enclosed in chain link run, the run has hardware cloth around the perimeter and across the door, and along the ground for digging prevention, then i have another layer of metal fencing that is 8 gauge 48" tall with 1"x1.5" spacing... i'm not so good at describing the fence...
the roof of the run is chicken wire covered with heavy duty vinyl tarp, the back side is also tarped but with regular old tarp, mostly for a windbreak until i moved it to a corner of the house, now that part backs up to a wall.
my local army navy surplus guy got me a HUGE octagonal desert camo net ~ so cool... it's like a 40' stop sign, i had it all spread out to look closely to see the condition. it's mint and will be used to net off the entire corner of the house/garage where the setup is, i just need 25 feet of the tallest fence i can afford so i don't have to stoop inside and the rest of the flock can have a much larger run that is safe. i know my babies miss free ranging, but they will adjust much more quickly than i will get over the loss of my 2 little friends.
i only have 5 buckshot shells, a friend will be bringing me more tomorrow. but i have the shotgun by the back door ready to go, and a .22 mag in the living room by the window, a 30-30 in the upstairs bathroom, 2 have-a-heart traps baited with (store bought) chicken legs, although i doubt i'll catch a fox with those, and at the edge of the property my better half (BH) set up 3 snap-him-in-half traps, so the cats are IN til this is over. the dog is a little mush who only gets walked.
about 2 hours after i lost my Lily and Barney, i found out that we have a new neighbor bit over a half mile away (next property down really...) who had lost one bird everyday for the last 4 days. wish i had known that they #1 lived there, #2 had birds, and #3 had experienced predators. the one other family living up here year round has ducks and geese. we always call each other when we spot something, so neither of us let our birds out...
my coop is wooden Amish built, enclosed in chain link run, the run has hardware cloth around the perimeter and across the door, and along the ground for digging prevention, then i have another layer of metal fencing that is 8 gauge 48" tall with 1"x1.5" spacing... i'm not so good at describing the fence...
the roof of the run is chicken wire covered with heavy duty vinyl tarp, the back side is also tarped but with regular old tarp, mostly for a windbreak until i moved it to a corner of the house, now that part backs up to a wall.
my local army navy surplus guy got me a HUGE octagonal desert camo net ~ so cool... it's like a 40' stop sign, i had it all spread out to look closely to see the condition. it's mint and will be used to net off the entire corner of the house/garage where the setup is, i just need 25 feet of the tallest fence i can afford so i don't have to stoop inside and the rest of the flock can have a much larger run that is safe. i know my babies miss free ranging, but they will adjust much more quickly than i will get over the loss of my 2 little friends.