This is our sweet Florence who died about a week ago from a hawk.
She looked like a golden retriever who was reincarnated as a bird. She was, by far, the classiest of the four. It was like she's always judging the other three for being too spazzy.
What we learned from her is this: the chicken run DOES need a roof, goddamit.
As rookies, we asked a ton of questions as we were getting set up, and the feedback was mixed about whether or not we’d need a roof on our run. (To be clear on the lingo, a chicken ‘coop’ is pretty small, at least ours is. It includes an enclosed area ‘upstairs’ where the hens sleep, as well as a fenced-in bottom area, that’s like a playpen and holds their water and food. They can eat and drink freely during the day, but when we put them to bed in the evening, around 7pm, we store the food elsewhere so it doesn’t attract rodents and such during the night.)
The girls also need a run to roam around and play and scratch and peck and do all their wonderful chicken rituals. So we fenced off a nice wide space in the corner of our yard that connects to the pen-part of the coop. It is nestled in the shade and safety of our Russian olive tree. Lots of rocks to climb on and leaves to tear up. We put sand down for them to dust-bath in and to make poop clean-up a little easier.
(You can see both sides of the coop in these photos. We climb over the fence into the run using two iron chairs pushed back-to-back. I have the tarp pulled back when I am sitting right with them, but close it again when I am not out there on predator-duty.)
We were told by a handful of experienced chicken-goers that predators are only really a concern during the morning and in the evening hours, so that’s when we’ve had our girls in the bottom of the coop.
Not so. We didn’t think about the aerial predators. (And neither did anyone we asked.)
Last Wednesday, we left the girls out in the run for a few hours to go to the library. When we returned, Opal ran out back to check on them and that’s where she found Florence, very dead. She stood and stared for a good, long stretch before it hit her what happened. (Later, she told us that she thought one of the girls had just lost a bunch of feathers. Until she saw Florence’s foot.)
Luckily, the gore was underneath and Opal really only saw the feathers on top. After giving it some thought, I was surprised that the hawk didn’t just take Florence completely, snatch her up to leave us perplexed and wondering. And also that it didn’t get any of the other girls.
Needless to say, Opal shed many tears in Florence’s honor. We held her and told stories of the sweet bird that we had the good fortune to know for ten days. We buried Florence’s mangled body in the rose garden by the chicken run and put a garden statue of a sleeping kitten on top, to keep squirrels from digging her up.
For the rest of the evening, the hawk perched on our fence, bullying the other hens with it’s threatening stare. But we kept them safely in their coop while we made a plan for a roof. Eventually, he got bored and left.
A few days later, while we were swinging in the backyard, I looked up and saw the hawk was floating above. He was so far away I thought he was a plane at first glance. He barely moved his wings. I wondered if he could possibly see from that far up. How remarkable his eyes must be.
As Opal said, “I hate that hawk. But at the same time, he’s a really beautiful bird.” And smart as hell.











