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Oh they probably know, but you have done a great job of deterring them from getting to them. Great jobCoop Related:
I was reading some posts over on the chicken section and read about someone loosing birds due to a predator that dug under, and into the coop. Coincidentally, my mom had mentioned recently that we should've put some fencing on the floor of the grass area of our goose's run to serve as a barrier in case a predator tries to come in from underground. [My geese house looks like this: a concrete slab area that serves as the main "coop" and a fenced in run, which we call their 'patio or backyard', both are connected by the same roof]![]()
Now I haven't seen any evidence that predators have been by the goose house, but I'm a little paranoid. Plus that chicken owner's experience was terrible.![]()
So I dug up their backyard a little, and layed some fencing down. I spread some topsoil on top of it and layed pieces of sod that I bought from HD. Here's what it looked like [click to enlarge]
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I fell short on the number of sod pieces that I should have gotten. Oops.
But then my mom came to the rescue, so NOW it looks like this:
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I feel much more comfortable with that in place - though I know predators out there are sneaky (but I hope they haven't figured out that we have geese!)
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Thanks Going Bhonkers.
Ninya is a white chinese, but she is doing everything you have described. Right now she is burying the ggs in the hay and I'm having to dig them out.She is an African right? Our production Africans laid (last year Dec 2011) right into mid to late spring, every other to every three days like clockwork. If i didnt take the egg she would start trying to sit. Hope this helps some.