Chicken wont stop charging at me and trying to bite my feet.

Goblingchickenfather

In the Brooder
Nov 29, 2022
21
48
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It's been going on awhile. I'll be walking by our chicken and she'll either be fine or she'll make a charge at me and nip my foot. She has broken skin several times. She doesn't do this to my partner at all. Though she has had attitude problems before but is generally good and we can both pick her up to hold her to be be pet or hugged etc. She just has these aggressive moments that I don't understand.

i've tried some of the dominance stuff but she still goes for it. Or she'll stand up tall to fight when i push her back with my arm or leg. She's only laid eggs a small handful of times a few months ago and hasn't since. She's only about 9 months old.
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It's been going on awhile. I'll be walking by our chicken and she'll either be fine or she'll make a charge at me and nip my foot. She has broken skin several times. She doesn't do this to my partner at all. Though she has had attitude problems before but is generally good and we can both pick her up to hold her to be be pet or hugged etc. She just has these aggressive moments that I don't understand.

i've tried some of the dominance stuff but she still goes for it. Or she'll stand up tall to fight when i push her back with my arm or leg. She's only laid eggs a small handful of times a few months ago and hasn't since. She's only about 9 months old. View attachment 3561924
I never visit my chickens with open toed shoes. They just naturally peck. Even at my shoes. Have you tried pointing your finger at them? Mine all come running to bite it. It doesn't mean they are being mean or dislike me. Chickens are just very curious.
 
She might be suffering from a disorder of her reproductive tract.
This could be an infection like egg yolk peritonitis or ovarian tumours that often lead to hormonal imbalances triggering aggressive behaviour.
 
She might be suffering from a disorder of her reproductive tract.
This could be an infection like egg yolk peritonitis or ovarian tumours that often lead to hormonal imbalances triggering aggressive behaviour.
Is there anyway we could check for this? Or I'm guessing this is something a vet would have to check for.
I never visit my chickens with open toed shoes. They just naturally peck. Even at my shoes. Have you tried pointing your finger at them? Mine all come running to bite it. It doesn't mean they are being mean or dislike me. Chickens are just very curious.
These are outwardly aggressive charges and deliberately aimed bites at my feet. Not really the toes. She doesn't do it to my partner only me.
 
Is there anyway we could check for this? Or I'm guessing this is something a vet would have to check for.

These are outwardly aggressive charges and deliberately aimed bites at my feet. Not really the toes. She doesn't do it to my partner only me.
What you feel is aggression I just think it's normal chicken behavior. There's always one in the flock. I've had 20 chickens and each one raised from 2 days old. They all have their own personalities. There has to be an Alpha. I took on that role. Never show fear and never run.
 
What you feel is aggression I just think it's normal chicken behavior. There's always one in the flock. I've had 20 chickens and each one raised from 2 days old. They all have their own personalities. There has to be an Alpha. I took on that role. Never show fear and never run.
ah well then i'll have to make her remember who feeds her haha.
 
One of my Easter Egger hens, Yarrow, grabs my leg and bites it when she wants food, and the other chickens seeing her do that and receive food also taught them to do that. I think your chicken is being naturally curious in a similar way as Yarrow, unless she is full-on charging at you like a flogging rooster would do.
 
One of my Easter Egger hens, Yarrow, grabs my leg and bites it when she wants food, and the other chickens seeing her do that and receive food also taught them to do that. I think your chicken is being naturally curious in a similar way as Yarrow, unless she is full-on charging at you like a flogging rooster would do.
Yeah she gets a small running start usually. She's broken skin twice now.
 
Though she has had attitude problems before but is generally good and we can both pick her up to hold her to be be pet or hugged etc. She just has these aggressive moments that I don't understand.
Familiarity can breed Contempt. ;)

I never cuddle my chickens and they never come after me.
When I hand fed more often I had a few get aggressive.

Have had this happen several times, mostly with hand fed chicks often as they come of age and get spunky. It's pretty easily curbed with calm and deliberate determination.

I peck them back, on the head or anywhere I can reach, with the tips of thumb and first 2 fingers, as hard and fast as many times as I can before they get away. Well, not hard enough to hurt them, just startle them and let them you mean business. That's what another chicken would do, so they understand that kind of communication.

If that doesn't work after a couple applications, I hold them down to the ground with my hand on their back until they submit....again firmly enough to get the job done but not hurt them....add a few finger pecks and/or tug on the feathers on the back of their neck.

 
Familiarity can breed Contempt. ;)

I never cuddle my chickens and they never come after me.
When I hand fed more often I had a few get aggressive.

Have had this happen several times, mostly with hand fed chicks often as they come of age and get spunky. It's pretty easily curbed with calm and deliberate determination.

I peck them back, on the head or anywhere I can reach, with the tips of thumb and first 2 fingers, as hard and fast as many times as I can before they get away. Well, not hard enough to hurt them, just startle them and let them you mean business. That's what another chicken would do, so they understand that kind of communication.

If that doesn't work after a couple applications, I hold them down to the ground with my hand on their back until they submit....again firmly enough to get the job done but not hurt them....add a few finger pecks and/or tug on the feathers on the back of their neck.
Yeah I appreciate the advice. I'll try to make some changes and we'll see if we can curb the biting. Thank you thank you.
 

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