Goose vanished

Solomonscoupons

Hatching
Oct 11, 2024
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Hello! We have two geese and yesterday, when we put the ducks and geese away for the night, there was only one goose. No signs of a struggle anywhere, no feathers, nothing. We’ve searched everywhere. Our LGDs didn’t alert, the ducks don’t seem scared, nothing seems amiss, but the goose has been missing all day today. We’ve got a good size predator load, so I’m trying to figure out if she was taken by a predator, or if she decided to go broody (in October at about 6 months old?) and is hiding in the forest.
If it is a predator, I’m thinking it would have to be a bird or prey. We’ve got eagles, Hawks, owls, and there’s been a strangely persistent raven around all day. Can a raven take a full grown goose?!
Any ideas?
 
:welcome sorry for the circumstances. At 6 months old, it is very unlikely that she is setting on eggs. Perhaps an eagle might be large enough to carry off a goose, but no other raptors can. My gut instinct is that she was taken by a 'snatch and grab' predator like a bobcat or coyote. Keep an eye on the rest of your flock.
 
Hello! We have two geese and yesterday, when we put the ducks and geese away for the night, there was only one goose. No signs of a struggle anywhere, no feathers, nothing. We’ve searched everywhere. Our LGDs didn’t alert, the ducks don’t seem scared, nothing seems amiss, but the goose has been missing all day today. We’ve got a good size predator load, so I’m trying to figure out if she was taken by a predator, or if she decided to go broody (in October at about 6 months old?) and is hiding in the forest.
If it is a predator, I’m thinking it would have to be a bird or prey. We’ve got eagles, Hawks, owls, and there’s been a strangely persistent raven around all day. Can a raven take a full grown goose?!
Any ideas?
The raven is an unlikely culprit but they have a sharp bill and talons
 
Great horned owls and Eagles can take a wild goose, but a heavier domestic goose, probably not. I agree with sourland that it was probably a bobcat or coyote. But I'd keep up the search, just in case.
 
So... I have to raise a few points here. I'm still flexible and I still could be wrong...

I have experienced both bird of prey predators AND dogs in the neighborhood being culprits. When it was dogs that attacked my birds, there was always remains, blood, viscera around right where they were grabbed every single time. Every dog attack this was constant. A dog is 'more likely' (but not guaranteed to) also start 'dismantling' right there.

But with the bird of prey 'incidents' there was no sign of anything at all. No blood on the ground. Nothing to track. Birds of prey tend to carry it off somewhere safe away from the ground before they start eating.

...
 

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