Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Loss of Our Girls

It's a very sad day around The Patch. Some kind of wild vermin managed to get into our chicken tractor and slaughter all of our girls! The trouble began Saturday morning when I found one of them dead in the corner of the run area with minimal trauma signs that looked more like cannibalism by the others. Since there were no signs of foul play or forced entry, I chalked it up to a natural death followed by cannibalism by the other three. I had just picked them all up the night before and there were no signs of sickness. Vents were clean and heads, eyes and combs were bright and clear. Although one of them had occasionally laid a shell-less egg ever since we got them; a sign of internal reproductive abnormality that had gotten worse over the last few weeks.

This morning was bad. Two were dead outright, and the third, Nugget, was crouched in the corner hurting and barely alive. There were no morning eggs in the nest boxes or empty shells. I picked her up and a big chunk of her lower abdomen was missing. I had to euthanize her straight off as she was suffering and there was no way she would recover from that type of trauma. I can only imagine the commotion that must have transpired sometime during the night or early this morning as well as the pain and agony that followed.

The asshole that did this must have managed to wiggle through the lattice work of either the end or top hatches. All of the poultry fence was secure and there were no signs of anything digging in under the tractor frame. However, the culprit did manage to take a dump inside the run area. This scat had no visible hair but there were obvious seeds most likely from our own raspberry patch. The ultimate indignity; taking a dump at the scene of the crime after eating some of our own berry crop.

I WILL HUNT YOUR ASS DOWN AND THERE WILL BE HELL TO PAY!


We'll miss you girls and the dozens of eggs you made for us over the last sixteen months.

3 comments:

  1. This comment has been removed by the author.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Sorry for the loss. That varmint will just need to pay. I lost any empathy I had for the critter when it killed left one chicken suffering to die a long scary, painful death. I am thinking weasel or mink but its a mystery. I would think that a Bear, Coyote, Raccoon, would be too big. Maybe a really smart Chubacabra that knows how to open and close the tractor. It will be interesting to hear what the varmint is.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I'm so sorry. What a loss :(. I'm betting weasel.

    ReplyDelete