UPDATE: I suspect that the hawk I've been seeing around here is actually a Broad-Winged Hawk...The description and call matches it anyway. Do you think it could be a threat to our free-ranging chickens???? Thanks!
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At my mom's house, we're going to get some chickens and build a chicken coop this upcoming week. And so I've been thinking about predators...I haven't noticed any except for a pair or more of Sparrow Hawks, also known as the American Kestrel, who fly around here everyday (except for when the crows/blue jays chase them away). The Kestrel isn't very big compared to other hawks/falcons (it's a little larger than a blue jay), but could it still fly away with an adult standard chicken? I know it could most likely take away a baby chick or a younger chicken if it wanted to. We plan on letting our chickens free range (who will be younger when we get them) and I'm worried about the pairs of Kestrels around here. Any thoughts? Should I worry about them or not?
Thanks!
Here's what an American Kestrel looks like...They really are beautiful birds, in my opinion.
But I would hate to lose any chickens to one.
According to http://www.oregonzoo.org/Cards/BirdsOfPrey/americankestrel.htm, this is the usual diet of the American Kestrel:
DIET:
Prey consists mostly of small rodents, reptiles, insects, and an occasional small bird hence the common name of Sparrowhawk. American Kestrels have been photographed killing prey as large as a wood rat!

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At my mom's house, we're going to get some chickens and build a chicken coop this upcoming week. And so I've been thinking about predators...I haven't noticed any except for a pair or more of Sparrow Hawks, also known as the American Kestrel, who fly around here everyday (except for when the crows/blue jays chase them away). The Kestrel isn't very big compared to other hawks/falcons (it's a little larger than a blue jay), but could it still fly away with an adult standard chicken? I know it could most likely take away a baby chick or a younger chicken if it wanted to. We plan on letting our chickens free range (who will be younger when we get them) and I'm worried about the pairs of Kestrels around here. Any thoughts? Should I worry about them or not?
Thanks!
Here's what an American Kestrel looks like...They really are beautiful birds, in my opinion.





According to http://www.oregonzoo.org/Cards/BirdsOfPrey/americankestrel.htm, this is the usual diet of the American Kestrel:
DIET:
Prey consists mostly of small rodents, reptiles, insects, and an occasional small bird hence the common name of Sparrowhawk. American Kestrels have been photographed killing prey as large as a wood rat!
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