What could have killed my pullets?

I am outside of Boone about 20-25 minutes. I could in theory kill the fox, but I doubt it would help much because there are quite a few foxes in the area. I also don't think I could stomach it. I might be better off just keeping the birds in their run unless I can keep a close eye on them all.
 
I am outside of Boone about 20-25 minutes. I could in theory kill the fox, but I doubt it would help much because there are quite a few foxes in the area. I also don't think I could stomach it. I might be better off just keeping the birds in their run unless I can keep a close eye on them all.

I have accepted that I can't tolerate the risk associated with free-ranging in my area.
One neighbor down the road is fine with occasional losses. I am not.
I have six girls---started with seven and lost one at eight weeks from who knows what. It was far more devastating than I would have predicted. Having raised the little runt from the age of two days I was very attached to that little sweetheart.
Such is life, I guess.
But no, there will be no free-ranging in a place that is loaded with foxes, coyotes, raccoons, weasels, mink, hawks, owls, loose-running dogs (who are bird-hunters), and feral cats. My girls would no doubt enjoy free-ranging but they will have to go with what their hopelessly paranoid human mother hen prescribes for them. :)
 
:lau haha! Yes, these guys have a way of wrapping their scaley toes around your heart. I *had* 35 little guys, but after getting rid of cockerels and now having these two ladies killed, I'm down to 29. The one good thing that comes from losing chickens, is that it gives you an excuse to get more :D ;)
 

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