I've had chickens for a few years, decided to make an account

schrody

In the Brooder
Oct 10, 2024
10
25
36
I bought a house over 2 years ago with a chicken coop and the owners asked if they should leave the chickens and I said "yes".

I think there were 6 or so originally but only one of the chickens that came with the house is left. Its been a learning experience. The previous owners kept them in a very tiny enclosed run with no access to grass. The first thing I did was use that cheap green garden fence thats probably 3' or less high you can get from walmart and let them forage a bit. Chickens would fly over the fence to say 'hello' to me, so i'd pick them up and plop them back in their play pen. After a few months I had my first run-in with a predator; a small raccoon got in, ate two silkies whole and I caught it sleeping in the nesting box. He had dug into the run during the night. I closed its hole off with a brick, sealed the coop with the raccoon inside, ran inside my own home to grab a .22lr suppressed pistol and back out to execute the raccoon at point blank. That was the first time I've tasted raccoon, as I thought 'he ate my source of food, I can only repay in kind by eating it'.

I've had other times where I forget to close them up, and raccoons tear down my cheap fence and ate other hens. It took my about 8 months to replace my shoddy fence with a tall welded wire T-post fence, giving my chickens 1/4 acre of forage area. By this point I had adopted some chickens, bought others at auction. I expected a pair of Brahmas but the Brahma rooster was missing so I got a refund, and was left with a panzy silkie rooster I got from another pair I won at auction. I didn't know 'pair' meant a hen and a rooster, the silkie rooster probably would have been kicked to death by the brahma rooster. Raccoons are no longer a problem. They don't cross the fence and if they wonder along the fence out of curiosity, I have an unbaited trap they just waltz into. I have released some raccoons, eaten others... it depends on my mood and how aggressive the raccoons are.

Then predators came from the sky: hawks. I tried solar powered garden howls that move their heads when they detect movement but it took only a month or so for hawks to figure them out. The end result is that I took my chickens 1/4 acre of land, reduced it to about 100 square meteres (reduced to 10%) around the coop, acting as their castle and they can easily retreat when necessary. I still get hawks but the rooster makes a certain call I recognize and I work from home and can just walk outside and the hawk instantly nopes out.

I have had chicks, 8 now, but only 6 are alive. I do not incubate, I let the silkie hen from the pair I bought go broody and she does all the work. Last fall she hatched 2 pure silkies, 1 half silkie half brahma hybrid. All 3 lived to egg laying age but the half brahma died of natural causes in the coop. Another hatch, the pullets now about 21 weeks old, 1 half brahma / silkie, 1 half rhode island red / silkie, 1 pure silkie; I expect them to lay soon. Idk their genders tbh. But the pure silkie is the floofies chicken I've ever seen, and I had to get an eyebrow grooming kit to trim her to help her see better, albiet much to her dismay since all 3 are shy of people even me. About 10 weeks ago I had a another brahma / silkie hatch and a pure silie. This half brahma had yellow feet unlike the others and I was excited to see what she'd become, but she got snatched and carried away by a hawk.

I've only killed one of my chickens myself, a speckled hen came with the house, never laid eggs in her final year, refused to leave the coop and seemed to have a bad leg. I turned her into ground chicken burgers and enjoyed her. The original chicken that came with the house that is still alive is a speckled hen btw. She doesnt lay eggs anymore but she is friendly enough and goes outside so I have not eaten her.
 

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Hiya, and welcome to BYC! :frow

I'm sorry for your losses, but sure sounds like you know exactly how to fix the issues and take care of your chickens! We have so many varments here, but dogs and solar motion lights keep the riff-raff away. 1/2" hardware cloth is what we make any pens out of, but for the most part, they free range safely, knock on wood!
 

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