Advice Needed: How Do I Save My Succulent from a Rogue Free-Range Hen?

Not a joke. My once gorgeous succulent, "won" at a church bazaar about 5 years ago, only after dumping about $10 worth of quarters on various numbers just before the number wheel was spun, is now in jeopardy.

Its attempted murderer is a tough-as-nails free-range hen, I call Mama. She's the lone survivor of about ten chickens and roosters brought and released here a few years ago, after being captured from a property set for salvage, then demolition. She roosts at night in the trees. She scares the hell out of the countryhood dogs and cats. Her only predators are hawks, owls, and coyotes. Maybe snakes too, but something tells me she'd kick some snake ass too.

I feed her chicken scratch on a table/workbench on my porch. I have to feed her up there because both the neighbor's dog and mine will eat it (weird creatures!). She competes for the scratch with squirrels and apparently rats, which I've seen scurrying off at night if I need to go outside.

I also have four plants on the table. She leaves the yucka alone - who says chickens are dumb? However, she flies up into my succulent if she's out of food. Yesterday, I was on the porch when she came running up, but had to go inside to get her a scoop of food. When I returned seconds later, bitch she was standing in my plant pot!

Today, I found this: IMG_20160410_134858.jpg

She's stripped most of the leaves off this once gorgeous plant, and it's beginning to piss me off.

I only have one window in the front of the house I could put the plant in, and it belongs to Annie (aka Nanny Nanny Bo Banny) and Nip (aka Nipples) the dog and cat I am enslaved to. Plus, I nearly killed the defenseless plant one winter - the winter I actually did kill poor Basil - because there's just not enough sunlight in my old farmhouse.

I need some suggestions. I thought about putting some sort of metal spike things into the pot. That keeps the cats out of the plants at my mom's house. Mama's too smart to actually hurt herself I think. Any other suggestions?

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Granma's picture

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Deja's picture

There's a salvage yard across the road. Three acres of used building materials. Surely I can scavenge something that will work.

Now I feel silly. Guess I was a bit blinded by my anger at the bird.

Thanks!

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You would not like my suggestion, although if the preacher was coming to your place for Sunday dinner, he would. And I suspect that since the "only" predators she has to worry about include hawks, they will solve your problem.

To be serious, chickens need company. Get more and get a rooster. They seem better at keeping a flock safe (2nd-hand info, but reliable) Wish I were able to keep some. Keep the yard bug-free and no egg like a fresh egg......

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defaultcitizen

Deja's picture

But, none had a chicken house that wasn't built in a swamp to roost in.

I definitely want more, but I have to build a proper place for them to be safe. She's been rogue so long, I wonder if she'd even roost any place but the trees.

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Pricknick's picture

dinner. I've had to do that with a couple of my more obnoxious hens.
They're free range also. Give me plenty of eggs but sometimes their range has to be "cut" short.
I know that you may find this a little extreme. I understand.

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Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.

Deja's picture

She'd likely take me out first lol.

I'll try the tomato cage suggestion, and see how that works. Besides, since my son went vegetarian a couple years ago, I basically am too.

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She can get through a tomato cage, though you could use it as a support for some chicken wire. Brace everything firmly, because she'll probably sit on it. You need to protect the soil in the pot, too, because they can dig huge holes, looking for bugs or just a good dust bath spot.

Still, they are charming creatures.

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Deja's picture

She'll perch on it, and get through it without something like chicken wire. The two together should work.

If I kept food out all the time, the plants would be relatively safe, but I can't get rid of the other critters who eat her food.

Side note: chickens crack me up when they run!

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Especially watching them run from behind. Like a funny little person. And then they croon to you...

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Alison Wunderland's picture

Made some calls for you. One chicken? It would be $5 down, $5 when the job is done, and $5 extra if it needs to look like an accident.

Don't tell anyone though, this sort of thing has to be handled discreetly.

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Deja's picture

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WiseFerret's picture

I'd offer her a home. Hopefully she'd teach my flock a thing or two about evading predators!
Chickens will eat nearly anything, so yes, you'll just have to find a way to protect it. I bend hardware cloth over my starts in my garden to protect them until they get large enough. Just the price to pay for having chickens eat the bugs.

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Deja's picture

I'll do my best to protect it.

She's a tough one, and I went online trying to find out what type of chicken she is, but think she's a mix. I'd love more like her that would lay me eggs in a central spot, but have to build a roosting house first, anyway.

Yes, they eat anything. The pic shows where she eats the leaves of the plant - probably for water. So, I have to make sure she has water after others have had their fill.

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Oldest Son Of A Sailor's picture

1/2 cup butter, 3 cups whole kernel white and yellow corn, diced carrots, diced celery, diced onion, minced garlic clove, 1/2 cup all-purpose flour, diced potatoes, shredded chicken meat, 4 cups divided chicken stock, 2 1/2 cups half-and-half, 1 pinch nutmeg, salt and ground black pepper to taste...

Old Hen Corn Chowder

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Pricknick's picture

A hens worth.

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Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.

Deja's picture

So glad this isn't TOP too. You'd likely have flags for 2 humorous comments, all in fun.

I used to make a nice chicken pot pie before my last kid at home became a vegetarian.

Biggrin

I'll never eat her, unless I accidentally kill her and know it immediately. And, like I said earlier, she'd likely take me out before I managed to kill her on purpose. So, I just have to do my best to protect my innocent plant. Sad

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Pricknick's picture

with your predicament. It is what it is.
For you to have a love of nature and all that encompasses it, is something to be proud of.

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Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.

Muddy Boots's picture

That plant looks hungry for a bit of blood and bone if you ask me. Plants aren't fussy about being vegetarian.

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"If we all threw our problems in a pile and saw everyone else's, we'd grab ours back" - Regina Brett

Pricknick's picture

actually great advice.

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Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.

thanatokephaloides's picture

(For them, that would be cannibalism!)

Wink

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