Mysterious deaths (warning, photos of dead chickens inside)

KarynVA

Crowing
May 29, 2020
843
3,021
263
SW Virginia
I would be for moving each of those bricks (especially the ones with holes in them) and looking for evidence of rats or some other burrowing thing.

Good suggestion. Did it. The dirt beneath and around the bricks is flat, compacted, undisturbed. Except ...

Good call @BlindLemonChicken

The brick all the way to the right in that last photo looks like the soil has been disturbed a bit.
... that is correct. I noticed it this morning but it looks like something one of our three cats did (they stay out at night) and it doesn't touch the coop structure. The brick there on the right, underneath it and up against the wood of the run front, the dirt is compacted. No visible breach or digging.

And yes, those coop in place photos were taken this morning after the, er ..... incident.
 

KarynVA

Crowing
May 29, 2020
843
3,021
263
SW Virginia
Here is another angle of the one with the feathers missing. Since that is the biggest part of the mystery, I thought maybe there's something here that can be deciphered. Sorry for the gruesome photo. 😢

7-9-22 close.jpg
 

NanaK

Crowing
8 Years
Jan 16, 2014
412
1,530
366
North Carolina
Here is another angle of the one with the feathers missing. Since that is the biggest part of the mystery, I thought maybe there's something here that can be deciphered. Sorry for the gruesome photo. 😢

View attachment 3179766

I had some young birds feather pick one time. To me this looks like the bird died first and then another bird started to pull feathers. Often when this happens others will join in. It would not take very long to pull this many feathers. It just doesn't look like anything attempted to eat any of it. Again, just speculation on my part.

There are some here at BYC who are really good at figuring out predator attacks. I think I would ask to have this thread moved to the Predators and Pest Forums or start a thread there with a link to this thread. You may get better answers than I can give.
 

Artichoke Lover

Free Ranging
Premium Feather Member
Jul 27, 2020
2,842
13,096
656
Southeast US
If it’s a predator there’s a good chance it will come back I would put up a game camera or something similar and lock your birds up a few hours earlier for a few weeks. It doesn’t look like a fight between them as that would leave injuries. Particularly on the head. Could a snake have gotten in? They can leave little to no signs of injury except for perhaps wet head and neck feathers.
 

KarynVA

Crowing
May 29, 2020
843
3,021
263
SW Virginia
Yeah, if it's a predator, these last two may be goners. That's just the circle of life, I'm afraid. I've done everything reasonably possible to protect them. My first batch of 3 golden comets lived in that coop in my yard, in the same set up, for over 2 years and we had actually just as many bear sightings and even more raccoon sightings those summers but they never had an attack.

I did post over on the predator forum also now. This is like a true crime forensic mystery. I MUST KNOW!
 
Nov 11, 2020
3,153
5,122
426
West Virginia
If I understand correctly there is bear scat in your yard and landscaping disturbed so I assume the chickens saw & heard everything.My guess is the 2 chickens ran inside the coop and the roosters being bolder stayed out.One thing that happens when chicken become frightened and stressed is is drop feathers all over the place.
 
Nov 11, 2020
3,153
5,122
426
West Virginia
Here is another angle of the one with the feathers missing. Since that is the biggest part of the mystery, I thought maybe there's something here that can be deciphered. Sorry for the gruesome photo. 😢

View attachment 3179766
There may not be any open cuts or wounds but it appears to be bruised under the skin or is it just the photos?
 

Geena

Free Ranging
7 Years
Aug 17, 2014
1,169
7,928
621
Maryland
Here is another angle of the one with the feathers missing. Since that is the biggest part of the mystery, I thought maybe there's something here that can be deciphered. Sorry for the gruesome photo. 😢

View attachment 3179766
So sorry, that's quite the mystery. 12 weeks is right around the time for a juvenile molt. If they did freak out about the bear and bounced off the sides a few times it may have resulted in them dropping a lot of feathers at once. I wonder if the bear walked right up and had a good look in there 😧
 

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