Building a chicken run is a good way to keep your chickens secure and happy.
Keeping poultry safe without a roof.
Keeping your hens safe.
Weed killer and other commonly used garden chemicals insect baits traps etc can be accidentally ingested by chickens.
Chickens need a safe place to spend their days.
You have a few options when it comes to choosing a material to make your roof out of.
Chicken keeping is such a wonderful hobby for anyone with a small amount of space in the backyard or garden and a desire for fresh eggs and entertainment.
To keep your chickens safe you need to do more than just keep the predators at bay.
Chickens can be enclosed successfully in a fox proof house and run and neighbours are usually happy to feed the chickens for you in return for some fresh eggs but keeping hens safe from the fox usually involves locking them up in their house at night time when they are most at risk of predators trying to get in.
It makes a racket when it rains and becomes hot in the summer although it.
Dogs wolves fox large cats and other large predators.
Without even stopping for shoes i raced outside just in time to see my best laying hen dive for cover under the stairs leading to our back door.
If you are building your dream coop or expanding to accommodate a growing flock remember that your chickens will spend much of their lives alfresco.
The hawk that was chasing her saw me and high tailed it out of the area.
A few tweaks to the raccoon proofing are all you need.
These 17 tips will help keep your ducks and chickens safe from predators in your back yard.
Sometimes the biggest threats are already in your garden.
Corrugated metal metal sheeting is always one of the easier and less expensive options but it s also the ugliest looking in my opinion and not the best for protection against the weather.
Your chicken coop doesn t have to be fortified like a bomb shelter though it may be starting to sound like it to keep your chickens safe.
Some of the most common options are.
Make sure your fences are secure without holes at the corners or seams.
Coyotes bobcats stray dogs cats hawks snakes skunks raccoons possums ferrets there is a long list of potential predators that would happily make a meal of your backyard ducks or chickens or their eggs.
Although most predators hunt by night there are daytime threats to a backyard flock including dogs foxes hawks and eagles.
Whether you keep chickens in the countryside city or somewhere in between one of the most important things you can do to keep your flock safe is to protect them from predators.