AfroChickens
Chirping
Welcome to BYC! I was raised in Decatur, lived in Gwinnett county for years before moving to the mountains (after my husband's 20 year stint in the Air Force). I didn't know that Stockbridge was chicken friendly. We were just there not long ago for a surgical procedure, crazy traffic! I'm out of practice driving around Atlanta. As long as you have used a stronger wire than chicken wire, cover windows with properly attached hardware cloth, and have a dig barrier on your pen and look at any weakness at "predator level", you probably won't lose any to predators. It takes a lot of thought and good materials, but then, you're set.
I live in the mountains with every predator imaginable but have never lost any to them, even free ranging. Of course, my roosters and good cover from the skies are credited with that and I will eventually lose someone to an animal attack, but not likely inside their barn. Prevention, as they say, is worth a pound of cure, and it certainly goes for building a strong chicken fort! You'll enjoy your Buff Orpingtons. I loved my Golden Girls, though they've all passed on now.
Small world! This past Sat was the first time that I witness the Stockbridge traffic since moving, I didn't know this town could have traffic like that! Stockbridge is very chicken friendly but I would think there would be HOA issues in those newer neighborhoods. I'm sure there are rules in those type of homes but we stay in a old neighborhood (home built in 1978!). I did read in a ordinance that due to our land size, we couldn't have a roo. I'm okay with that because I never cared much for my grandma's neighbor's roo growing up haha. The houses outside of my neighborhood have chickens along with goats. Actually, lots of people have the whole goat to chicken thing going on here. I must have missed that memo when I moved here.
I went into full predator mode when designing our coop/run. I'm laying down hardware cloth on the floor, our yard is completely fenced in but I'm not taking any chances. It would be hard for me to see any predator coming from a distance due to how the foliage is outside of our yard's fence so I know the chickens would have a hard time seeing as well. The whole run will be hardware cloth basically. Thanks to BYC for teaching me that chicken wire wouldn't be good for the run/coop btw! I do know that my dog (even though she is in the house) is very alert and sleeps in the sun room facing the yard at night. She let's us know when any creature comes in the yard. Her level of alert matches the level of creature basically. She gets more fussy when it's more than just a cat. She has been successful at already scaring away the three tom cats we had that would stop by our yard when we first moved in last month.
I've also made friends with a neighbors dog that stays outside in a yard behind ours but right by the chicken coop. I know that will deter most predators with so many loud dogs around (seriously, once one dog starts the whole street starts sounding the alarm) but I'm not chancing a thing! That's why I made the run big because I once saw a dog in our yard. That dog gets out ALOT in my neighborhood and I've yet to figure out how he got in our yard when it has no holes or loose pieces.
Our run houses our coop. It's an open (and cheap) coop design that will help with the crazy GA heat but also is adjustable to add any insulation for the cold. Speaking of which, I've read alot about how the folks in northern regions protect their chickens but is that needed in our climate? I'm a sucker for cold so to me GA gets "cold weather" but I know we don't get truly cold weather that often. I know it's probably more cold up in North GA but what did you do for the winter season? Does that breed need anything extra since they are cold hardy?