Yesterday we had a chick stolen and, presumably, killed by a neighbouring cat.
We've had problems before with this cat, but a few water bombs (near misses, I can't throw) sorted him out and he got the message that he was not to touch the girls.
Except the cat was biding his time. The girls were all roosting up in the afternoon warmth under some shrubs with Shirley and her three frizzle/silky/pekin chicks, dozing away. We heard nothing despite being only yards from them, they didn't make a single squawk or cluck. The cat just ran through, grabbed a chick and kept running. BH saw him scale the fence with the chick's wing dangling. The weren't even any feathers in the garden.
We chased it immediately, and tracked him down to a hedge that is easily 4ft thick and very dense, but no chick. With the help of a dozen neighbours we've looked high & low through all of the surrounding gardens, front & rear and still cannot find the chick, or hear it.
I know it is, but I am sick of hearing people saying 'It's only a chicken' and as a cat owner, I know that the cat was just being a cat. But it doesn't stop me from feeling that I've let the chick down.
We've reconfigured our fencing as best we can, but I'm very worried to be going away this weekend to see my Dad before he has heart surgery. There is always someone here when the girls are out, but we just aren't as quick as that cat and he's bound to come back now he knows he can catch them.
I just feel awful to be leaving the girls with even a tiny risk of danger.
Jules
We've had problems before with this cat, but a few water bombs (near misses, I can't throw) sorted him out and he got the message that he was not to touch the girls.
Except the cat was biding his time. The girls were all roosting up in the afternoon warmth under some shrubs with Shirley and her three frizzle/silky/pekin chicks, dozing away. We heard nothing despite being only yards from them, they didn't make a single squawk or cluck. The cat just ran through, grabbed a chick and kept running. BH saw him scale the fence with the chick's wing dangling. The weren't even any feathers in the garden.
We chased it immediately, and tracked him down to a hedge that is easily 4ft thick and very dense, but no chick. With the help of a dozen neighbours we've looked high & low through all of the surrounding gardens, front & rear and still cannot find the chick, or hear it.
I know it is, but I am sick of hearing people saying 'It's only a chicken' and as a cat owner, I know that the cat was just being a cat. But it doesn't stop me from feeling that I've let the chick down.
We've reconfigured our fencing as best we can, but I'm very worried to be going away this weekend to see my Dad before he has heart surgery. There is always someone here when the girls are out, but we just aren't as quick as that cat and he's bound to come back now he knows he can catch them.
I just feel awful to be leaving the girls with even a tiny risk of danger.
Jules
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