jjjennejjj
Chirping
- Jul 29, 2021
- 82
- 55
- 98
I went camping for the weekend. I have about 70 chickens and I use hanging 5 gallon buckets with pvc feed openings. They hold about 25 pounds of pellet feed each.
I filled them up Thursday night. I have some breeding groups separated from the rest of the flock. When I got home, 2 of the pens had empty food buckets. That's almost 50 pounds of food in 2-3 nights! It is not scattered on the ground and the buckets have a strong musky/urine smell.
I killed a possum recently that was trapped in the run because I accidentally left the door open overnight.
I have a deep litter system and hwc under the pine shavings. (But it has mostly rusted. There is a concrete layer surrounding both the run and the coops. I have never had anything other than rats and snakes break in, but have tons of critters in the area.
I noticed a dirt mound with a 3" hole in the top right next to those pens and assumed something tried to dig in that was blocked by the concrete. I also found new mounds with similar sized openings in my garden area near the chickens.
I definitely have rats which are currently worse right now because i have a temporary stack of treated wood nearby for a build project and a couple usually scurry out when I flip the tarp off to pull out 2x4s. But this is the first time I have ever had THAT much food go missing that quickly. There are also missing eggs. But my chickens are all untouched.
What could have possibly eaten that much??? My brother suggests gophers bcuz of the coincidental new mounds and corresponding drop in food supply, but I can't picture gophers jumping a foot to get into the pvc openings. I have 2 barn cats, and 3 livestock guardian dogs, so I don't want to do poison. I have 2 water bucket rat traps set up near those coops with the missing feed. I am going to have to switch to daily feeding vs weekly feeding. I'll set up cameras as soon as I do the 1000 other things on my Spring-Must-Do-Now list.
In the meantime has anyone else dealt with something similar?
I filled them up Thursday night. I have some breeding groups separated from the rest of the flock. When I got home, 2 of the pens had empty food buckets. That's almost 50 pounds of food in 2-3 nights! It is not scattered on the ground and the buckets have a strong musky/urine smell.
I killed a possum recently that was trapped in the run because I accidentally left the door open overnight.
I have a deep litter system and hwc under the pine shavings. (But it has mostly rusted. There is a concrete layer surrounding both the run and the coops. I have never had anything other than rats and snakes break in, but have tons of critters in the area.
I noticed a dirt mound with a 3" hole in the top right next to those pens and assumed something tried to dig in that was blocked by the concrete. I also found new mounds with similar sized openings in my garden area near the chickens.
I definitely have rats which are currently worse right now because i have a temporary stack of treated wood nearby for a build project and a couple usually scurry out when I flip the tarp off to pull out 2x4s. But this is the first time I have ever had THAT much food go missing that quickly. There are also missing eggs. But my chickens are all untouched.
What could have possibly eaten that much??? My brother suggests gophers bcuz of the coincidental new mounds and corresponding drop in food supply, but I can't picture gophers jumping a foot to get into the pvc openings. I have 2 barn cats, and 3 livestock guardian dogs, so I don't want to do poison. I have 2 water bucket rat traps set up near those coops with the missing feed. I am going to have to switch to daily feeding vs weekly feeding. I'll set up cameras as soon as I do the 1000 other things on my Spring-Must-Do-Now list.
In the meantime has anyone else dealt with something similar?