Excellent advice! I have done most of these things with our rooster just by intuition and he has never attacked me. He loves to crow around me at times, so I have used some of the techniques in the article to show him that I am still the boss, but I appreciate him protecting the hens and treating them well, which he does! He always, and I mean always lets them know where food can be found and lets them have food first. He'll look at me with that look after letting the hens eat that seems to say -I'm treating them right, just want you to know! We have been able to have people in the same area with the rooster with no problems, as long as they show no fear - he really does pick up on that and I think he has fun with it when he senses that, because he doesn't attack, he just acts like he will but has always backed off. Almost like he wants to establish that he is the boss, but because we have treated him well since he was a young chick, he is just attempting to see who will be in charge. I have picked him up and carried him around the hens on numerous occasions and it really did settle him down in the early days. He rarely needs that now, but every once in awhile he apparently has an overload of testosterone which is best handled with handling and a mealworm treat.