A very stressful Sunday…
Sunny and her family woke me up really early, before sunrise and they insisted to go outside, so i let them out at 6:30, opened the door to the duck-run and fed everybody some treats, then made breakfast for me.
About an hour later the duck danger alarm went off!
I peeked out of the window and saw three coyotes running towards the flock, grabbed a shovel while dashing outside to confront the coyotes. Two ran away, the third one had Mr. Boots in his mouth, but let him go when seeing me and charged towards me.
No clear memory of what happened next, but it seems that the strange West Virginia weather saved me: An area of very high pressure formed in the atmosphere, right over the 'yotes head, causing a severe trauma and immediate termination…
Sadly the other two got away and took Annifrid, my last Black Swedish hen with her. 

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Ideas how to protect against coyotes? - The one that became a victim of the variations in air pressure was very skinny as if it hadn't eaten in a long time.
With the intention to scare them away, I set up a pallet on the hill-site and placed the dead coyote in plain view for the others to see and to feed the turkey-vultures. The ducks disagreed about the huge vultures so close to them, but they have to endure. And these vultures have no interest in the living.
Afaik, fences don't really protect against hungry coyotes, unless they are a mile high and under dangerously high voltage. And even then they might dig under it. 
@Magnolia Ducks , what did you do against coyotes?
I still have some of these almost invisible bird-netting, so would it be a good idea to hang these between the trees, using weak plastic strips? The idea is that the ducks will be able to run under the netting, but a coyote will hit the net, rip it down, become entangled and incapacitated.
Has anybody experience with traps for coyotes?
Last thing, where can i by a new handle for my shovel? - It broke somehow and the stores here only sell shovels, no handles.