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3 Dog Family Members are Chicken Coop Predators – How to Avoid Them by Planning Your Chicken Coop

Posted on 24 October 2010 by trickac

3 Dog Family Members are Chicken Coop Predators – How to Avoid Them by Planning Your Chicken Coop

Chicken coop predators can be a headache for those raising chickens. 3 members of the dog family make it to list of the top chicken coop predators. Make it a point to know what dog predators you have in your community. From here, you can set up a plan which includes the appropriate measures for dealing with these animals. Here are the top three dogs that are chicken coop predators:

Coyote

As member of the dog family, coyotes are one of the most notorious chicken coop predators and are most active hunting for food at night time. Lately however, coyotes have already adapted to the presence of people and have become active even during day time especially during cooler months. Coyotes usually prey on chickens, geese, ducks, and other fowls. Shooting these predators can be a futile way of preventing them from attacking back. Make sure that you provide a trap or keep the coop coyote-proof.

Fox

Foxes are the next dog family member that is a known predator to poultry birds. They can be highly skilled hunters and primarily nocturnal. Like coyotes, they have also learned recently to hunt during daylight hours. They are very sneaky and intelligent. Foxes normally attack at least 2 hours after sunset or 2 hours just before sunrise. Furthermore, they carry the livestock far away for the owner not to trace it.

Domestic Dogs

The neighborhood dogs are one of obvious predators proven to be very destructive to your livestock. Even your own dog can be potentially a predator if not controlled. Train your very own pet dog not to harm your chickens.

Effective Solutions

One effective solution to deter these predators is to keep the chickens locked in the coop. The coop should be made of solid wood as well if you want to keep the predators outside. Predators, however, can get tricky and can dig into the ground so make sure that the chicken wire fencing is also planted into the ground. Moreover, ensure that there are no holes where these predators can get in. These animals can enter the chicken house through the small holes and will definitely prey on your pets once they get through into the coop.

In planning your chicken coop, make sure you have the right strategies to avoid these predators getting at your chickens especially the chicks. Know them well and your best bet is to prevent them from entering the coop by making that chicken house predator-proof.

For a step-by-step guide in how to Build Chicken Coop, check out our site for more free tips, building advices, product reviews, and more blog updates. Need more details? Update yourself with various tips on Chicken Coop Designs.

Bucking The Odds hunts with Dave Seynore! 296 yard shot takes out coyote.

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Build A Chicken Hen House

Posted on 03 September 2010 by trickac

Build A Chicken Hen House

The Size – Some people will let their chickens run loose, especially during warm weather. The problem with this is that you will have hen droppings all over and you may have to hunt for the eggs in odd places that the hens pick to nest. It is far better to build a closed pen and hen house. An ideal size for a rooster or two and six to eight hens would be a hen house approximately three by nine feet with a ten-foot high ceiling and an outside run about nine by twelve.

The Design – You can build a hen house from just about anything so long as it has a varmint-proof floor, sound walls and roof. In the cold climates, it should be free of winter drafts and in the hot climates, good summer ventilation. It can even be part of a shed. Cut a hole about a yard square from one of the outside walls about five feet off the ground. Cover it with a strong aluminum fly screening. This will let fresh air circulate, let some of the sun in and keep the flies out.

The Roost – Chickens prefer to spend the night off the ground. You can run lengths of two by fours about five feet high along each of the long side of the walls of the hen house. Then on these and extending across the short side of the hen house, nail the nesting boards, one by two-inch rough lumber. Place the back roost six inches from the back wall and the other a foot apart. Normally a heavy-bodied chicken requires a good square foot of roosting space in the summer. In winter, they may crowd closer together for the warmth.

The Door – At floor level underneath the square hole covered with screening, make a hole a foot square with a door that slides up and down in rough wood channels. This stays open most of the time but, when cleaning the hen house, you will want to keep the hens outside in the pen.

Don’t know what to do with all those messy leaves laying around your yard? Use them as a floor covering for your hen house. They keep the droppings from sticking to the wood and makes it easier to clean the hen house.

For more information on eggs, raising chickens and building your own chicken shed, please visit the author’s blog

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FrontierVille Varmint Hunting and Tips

Posted on 08 July 2010 by Ashley McFadden

frontiervillepost.com brings you this tip for how to clobber varmints that are hiding and how to know when not to clobber them! Please check out the website and share with your friends!

http://www.youtube.com/v/2gMsxlZ9O4Y?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

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FrontierVille Varmint Hunting and Tips

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FrontierVille Varmint Hunting and Tips

Posted on 08 July 2010 by Willy Sandler

frontiervillepost.com brings you this tip for how to clobber varmints that are hiding and how to know when not to clobber them! Please check out the website and share with your friends!

http://www.youtube.com/v/2gMsxlZ9O4Y?f=videos&app=youtube_gdata

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FrontierVille Varmint Hunting and Tips

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