Well spoken AM.
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However, if you allow the rooster to flog you, and he gives up on that idea, what's to keep him from challenging your visitor, or your 5 year old grand child, or the teenager you hire to tend your flock while you're away???? Yes, to each his own, but IMO to encourage someone who is new or inexperienced to allow rooster to human aggression is an invitation to a personal injury law suit, or even worse yet, may cause lasting injury to a child.
First off this rooster is courting you his keeper. No one says that roosters are the sharpest knives in the drawer. I have often said that man fighting roosters are made, not hatched.For those vested in roosters, the observed behavior is usually referred to as "cutting the wing" or "dropping the wing". Has an aggression component but can also be a part of courtship. I see it at most only once per male bird and then it stops as I do not provide proper response. My response is to provide no response. I do not have aggressive roosters despite not culling against it. I also have a lot of roosters, more than most have chickens.