To free range or to not free range? That is the question

To free range or to not free range?

  • Free range

  • Don’t free range


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Anyone know what breed of chickens those are in the picture for this thread on the home page? They're gorgeous
They’re buff Orpingtons! I love my honey, she’s a sweety
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My birds have a good size run bordered by my chainlink fence on three sides and chicken wire on the other. I expanded it last year. They have no net or fence covering in 80% of the area from above. However there are two trees inside, two outside that cover the sky view so that helps from above (along with a shed bordering on one end)

Sometimes they hop out and play in the main yard (still gaurded by chainlink) or hop to the neighbors which is open. A couple times a month during spring summer and fall I let them out for a few hours to have range of the yard with the dogs inside.

We have never lost a bird to any wild predator and we live outside city limits in country area. Have heard owls, coyotes, seen a fisher cross my yard once and the only one lost was too our own dogs.

I have two owl decoys displayed and thinking about attaching a couple crow decoys to the chain link fence that may add a little gaurding. If I need to I can close them up well at night but havent yet so they can come out early morning

I think the trees and my shed blocking many views from the sky and ground and having double fences to possibly cross is a deterent, and maybe the smell of four dogs keeps other things out too. I don't know, hopefully it all stays this way.
 
I open my coop between 7 and 8 am and they let themselves back in at dusk. At the point I lock the coop door.
I wait until my young birds are too big for the local hawks,
But figure after that they can take care of themselves.
In 4 years, I have only lost one bird.
 

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