Posted by John in Md on April 08, 2016 at 04:32:12 from (70.192.192.171):
Last month I posted about 12 hens missing in one evening, and I thought it was neighbors bird dogs. Well I got it straightened out with neighbor and he paid for hens. I now keep chickens in yard and close them in chicken house after dark. Last night I went out to dinner and didn't get home until 9:30, went to close hens in house and all 25 dead and dragged out of house and laying around yard. Inside of henhouse all torn up and feathers all over roosts broken or knocked over, even straw in laying boxes dug out. My question is what can get over 6' chain link and kill 25 hens and only eat the head off of one and leave the rest? It's daylight and there's no hole under fence and no tracks in yard. I threw all the hens in chicken house and left the chicken door (8" x12") open with a Connibear 220 set in doorway, I wonder what I'll catch. I wonder if I should refund neighbors payment for last 12 hens?
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Today's Featured Article - A Brief History of Tractors in Australia - by Bob Kavanagh. After Captain Cook's exploration of the east coast in 1770 the British Government decided to establish a penal colony in Australia. The first fleet arrived in 1788 and consisted mainly of convicts who were poorly equipped and new little of farming techniques. The colony remained far from self-supporting and it was not until the early 1800's that things started to improve. Free settlers started to arrive, they followed the explorers across the mountains and where land was suitable set up farms. T
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