Who killed our chicken?

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Discussion

Lord Flashheart

Original Poster:

3,770 posts

199 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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I came home yesterday to find our one and only remaining chicken in two parts! She was in her open topped pen when the murder took place, which is where her body remained, however her head was 70ft away up the garden. This morning when I went to bag up the carcass, it had gone. I'd suggest there are 3 suspects: Fox, Red Kite/Buzzard, Cat.
Facts: I could count on one hand how many foxes we've seen in 15 years and never in the garden. Previous chickens would roam free well beyond the garden into the field and woods and did so without a problem for 3 - 4 years. Also our 2 dogs are free in the garden every day, but can't get into the chicken run. I'd have expected them to kick off at the slightest noise, scent, visual on a fox.
We have 3 cats who often sit on the run and watch the chicken. Two of them certainly wouldn't bother, but number 3 is a bit if a bd. He'll kill all day long, but not sure about a chicken.
Then there are the Kites or Buzzards that regularly circle high up.
So why was the head so far away? Did the murderer drop it there? Or was it dropped just outside the run and taken by a dog? Who could the murderer be? So many questions!

zygalski

7,759 posts

151 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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This is PH, so I'm inclined to say Jeremy Corbyn.

Mabbs9

1,203 posts

224 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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I'll bet £2 that's it's not a kite, although they're highly likely to take away any carcass, just not do the actual killing. I'm less familiar with buzzards but I'd suspect the same. Sparrow hawk unlikely to tackle a chicken and would be characterized by stripping all the feathers on site.

I know foxes do a lot of killing in one massacre then return in stages for the spoils, but agree that your situation looks harder to decipher.

Sorry that it happened, good luck with the investigation.

Atb

Lord Flashheart

Original Poster:

3,770 posts

199 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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zygalski said:
This is PH, so I'm inclined to say Jeremy Corbyn.
Hmm, could be. This chicken was Jewish too.

Marlin45

1,327 posts

170 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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Aliens?

Cantaloupe

1,056 posts

66 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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Definitely an element of fowl play involved.

Ziplobb

1,402 posts

290 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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Badger ? we have lost 9 in the last few weeks to Badgers

Lord Flashheart

Original Poster:

3,770 posts

199 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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Ziplobb said:
Badger ? we have lost 9 in the last few weeks to Badgers
Hadn't even considered a Badger! Mind you, I've never seen one at home... probably something to do with backing onto a cow field..

P700DEE

1,136 posts

236 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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Prior to rescuing four in a recent re-homing smile we lost our last chicken between 2pm and 4pm on a sunday afternoon. Just a small patch of feathers left. We also have at least three Buzzards around and the other birds we feed stayed away for about a week. It could have been a Fox but we think Buzzard...

Lord Flashheart

Original Poster:

3,770 posts

199 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
quotequote all
P700DEE said:
Prior to rescuing four in a recent re-homing smile we lost our last chicken between 2pm and 4pm on a sunday afternoon. Just a small patch of feathers left. We also have at least three Buzzards around and the other birds we feed stayed away for about a week. It could have been a Fox but we think Buzzard...
I did Google before my post and Buzzards have been known to do this. In our case the decapitation is interesting. Perhaps just an easy fleshy part to remove first. Our dogs could easily have gone charging down the garden and spooked the culprit who could have dropped the head when flying or fleeing.

T-195

2,671 posts

67 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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Vladimir Putin?

The BBC?

Illegal immigrants?

Mikebentley

6,536 posts

146 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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Fox is our bet. We have loads of chickens and have had as many as 200 at once. Whenever we have had an attack heads have been removed. Tends to keep the prey still whilst they to and fro carrying them back to the den. Likely your dogs scared it off mid attack.

JeremyBearimy

192 posts

234 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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Chances are it wouldn't be red kite as they tend to only eat carrion.
There is a way of telling from the ends of the feathers as different animals pull them out in different ways (pulled cleanly out or stripped and broken). I shall ask the wildlife geek of a child when he's home from school which way round it is.

AlvinSultana

884 posts

155 months

Thursday 4th July 2019
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We once had a Stoat killing our fowl. Nasty little beasts.


Liokault

2,837 posts

220 months

Saturday 6th July 2019
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I was going to say it’s 100% a fox, but having googled a bit, it looks like taking heads off chickens is something buzzards like to do.

Very unlikely that you have no foxes in the area though.

Lord Flashheart

Original Poster:

3,770 posts

199 months

Saturday 6th July 2019
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Liokault said:
I was going to say it’s 100% a fox, but having googled a bit, it looks like taking heads off chickens is something buzzards like to do.

Very unlikely that you have no foxes in the area though.
Foxes must be around but we just don't see them like in town. The fact that 3 chickens roamed free in the garden, woods and field everyday for 3-4 years says a lot about the number of foxes. But those Buzzards do circle around these here parts! According to a previous reply, a lot can be deduced by the remaining feathers of which there are a lot. All of them look complete to me, like there was a bloody good plucking going on!

Jasandjules

70,415 posts

235 months

Saturday 6th July 2019
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Some kind of raptor? Sparrowhawk? Removal of head....

james-witton

1,363 posts

113 months

Saturday 6th July 2019
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Fox. It’s always foxes.

Boosted LS1

21,198 posts

266 months

Saturday 6th July 2019
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The question is, why wasn't it eaten? I'd guess at a bird strike but the bird didn't want to take food on the ground.

tweenster

86 posts

68 months

Saturday 6th July 2019
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Mink/weasel/stoat?