Chicken can be more useful than quail at times. They go around eating certain kinds of vermin and you don't have to keep them caged or even penned necessarily. You do have to build a coop though, unless you live somewhere where it never frosts.
dank_xiaopeng posted:lol @ trying to keep chickens without a fence. hope you like skunks and raccoon killin your whole flock in like 2 days
Well, I've seen them kept with "natural fences" around them like rows of different shrubs and trees that also feed them but you're right. For the most part chickens are too dumb to stay around food and wander off.
If you have a backyard you're fine just make sure they can't flap over the fence anywhere.
But yes, it is quite upsetting to open a chicken coop a fox got into the night before.
roseweird posted:what if my shitty landlord speaks no english and is just sort of generally horrified at the idea of allowing any of his tenants to do anything at all with his favorite square patch of unadorned dirt by where he puts his garbage cans
wow someone's in a hurry to gentrify Brooklyn!
tsinava posted:If you have foxes where you live then it's presumably rural enough to keep some guinea fowl maybe? They would help with egg-snatching intruders. Their eggs are extremely difficult to crack, at least for anything without opposable thumbs.
But yes, it is quite upsetting to open a chicken coop a fox got into the night before.
skunks will kill/eat hens if given the opportunity too. ive lost a bunch of birds to marauding skunks. usually if you have a rooster they will run/fly away (roosters seem to have a little more of a survival instinct than hens) but if a skunk manages to fget into the coop they'll fuck your flock up fast. stray dogs are terrible too
You can also have train a dog with an appropriate breed to walk around the farm protecting the animals from varmints and strays.
If you had more 4.5 more acres you could raise peacocks. They're pretty vicious birds when attacked.
You can also pee in jars for a while and pour it around your chicken coop if you wanna be cheap. You have to keep doing it though. You can also collect human hair and tie it to trees near the coop or bury it. I know that foxes hate human smell, I'm not sure about opossums or skunks. I'm sure they do to a certain extent. I know that raccoon don't give a fuck.
Ahahahah I found a somewhat related anecdote about skunks on gardenweb:
To keep unwanted critters out from under the porches I put in flat black painted plywood and covered that with white lattice so it appears from a ways back that the lattice is the only thing there. So now when I have one of those critters between me and the house and they make a mad dash for safety under the porch they run smack into the plywood, bounce back, sit there dazed for a time and leave when they recover. I seldom see them twice.
Edited by tsinava ()
now ye guineahen's a good eatin bird, but i'll be damned if them ladies dont lay they eggs in the queerest places. give me a good layin hen anyday, damned if im gone to tromp halfway to hell lookin fer some guinea nest. one time Leland Miller had him a mess a peahens what done laid up two dozen eggs in the smokehouse chimney. old Leland went to fire up that smoker to smoke him up some hams and damned if them keets didnt come arunnin out that firebox all burnt up to hell. all of em just settin there afire. leland never did get him no more peahens after that i dont believe
after the third hen we lost to skunks i just really beefed up our chicken run, made a hogwire enclosure with about a foot of fence buried so critters couldn't dig under. so far its worked well.
If you don't wanna kill them at least spray them with pee.
If the icky skunk spray somehow shoots through that you could maybe use a box trap or something.
anyway its a moot point, the new run works well and we haven't lost any more chickens. building a sturdy coop with a good closed run is a good investment and will save you lots of headaches down the way.
ive heard of rooftop chicken coops on tall apt buildings which would be awesome because all you'd need would be a coop and the birds could run around
Have you heard of chicken tractors? They're portable constructs that you keep your chickens in to peck in the the fields and fertilize it and you move it along every few hours.
People use heavy wood or put weights on them to prevent animals from flipping them over.
deadken posted:chickens have no concept of my family's clichéd class position
i wasnt talking about chickens ken
Dargydoof posted:If you want a scary bird, get geese. I remember just getting anywhere within 5 metres of the male goose would cause him to show his teeth and hiss.
I assume you mean the ridges along the bills of waterfowl used for filtration, because birds don't have motehrfucking TEETH dude
Dargydoof posted:If you want a scary bird, get geese. I remember just getting anywhere within 5 metres of the male goose would cause him to show his teeth and hiss.
Alligators also a particularly scary birds