CoriBadger
Chirping
- Apr 15, 2021
- 13
- 65
- 89
Hello,
I'm hoping someone has been through a similar situation! I don't want to rehome this hen; she's a sweet bird, except for...
I have a 15-month old Rhode Island Red, Scarlett, who's mid-tier on the pecking order. Out of eight birds total in my 9' x 23' run (adjoining 8' x 8' coop), she will go after and exclusively mount Phoebe, also hatched June 2022, an Astralorp who doesn't seem to notice a pecking order but ALWAYS notices and zooms after food. I have had all eight birds since they were chicks; they were raised together.
This behavior is an issue because Phoebe is now ragged - down to skin and stubble on her head, both sides of her neck, at the base of her tail, and on her right wing (left is starting to go, too). Scarlett only does this to Phoebe. I believe this is a progressive behavior that started many months ago. It shows no sign of stopping--every time they are in the same area, Scarlett will sneak up and jump on Phoebe, who sometimes squats, sometimes protests -- and, if I pull Scarlett off, Phoebe will peck her pretty aggressively. I have Scarlett separated in a 4' x 4' section of the run during the day, but I'm afraid this isn't fair or sustainable -- she also beats me to the punch when the coop door opens automatically in the morning before I can cage her, the brat -- but neither do I want Phoebe chafed to the point of open wounds and infection, which is where we're heading.
To sum up:
RIR hen continually and exclusively mounts Astralorp hen. Why?
Do I have to rehome my beautiful red bird, or does someone have a technique that worked to stop this behavior? I have tried knocking her off, forcing her to squat, carrying her around, sternly worded warnings, spraying her with the hose (sorry, Phoebe), tying string around her leg to off-balance her, and now, never letting her be unsupervised around Phoebe. I'm considering chicken diapers, blinders, a rooster (but I worry a rooster will just spread the "hens losing feather from aggressive mounting" around...)
The perpetrator and victim:
I'm hoping someone has been through a similar situation! I don't want to rehome this hen; she's a sweet bird, except for...
I have a 15-month old Rhode Island Red, Scarlett, who's mid-tier on the pecking order. Out of eight birds total in my 9' x 23' run (adjoining 8' x 8' coop), she will go after and exclusively mount Phoebe, also hatched June 2022, an Astralorp who doesn't seem to notice a pecking order but ALWAYS notices and zooms after food. I have had all eight birds since they were chicks; they were raised together.
This behavior is an issue because Phoebe is now ragged - down to skin and stubble on her head, both sides of her neck, at the base of her tail, and on her right wing (left is starting to go, too). Scarlett only does this to Phoebe. I believe this is a progressive behavior that started many months ago. It shows no sign of stopping--every time they are in the same area, Scarlett will sneak up and jump on Phoebe, who sometimes squats, sometimes protests -- and, if I pull Scarlett off, Phoebe will peck her pretty aggressively. I have Scarlett separated in a 4' x 4' section of the run during the day, but I'm afraid this isn't fair or sustainable -- she also beats me to the punch when the coop door opens automatically in the morning before I can cage her, the brat -- but neither do I want Phoebe chafed to the point of open wounds and infection, which is where we're heading.
To sum up:
RIR hen continually and exclusively mounts Astralorp hen. Why?
Do I have to rehome my beautiful red bird, or does someone have a technique that worked to stop this behavior? I have tried knocking her off, forcing her to squat, carrying her around, sternly worded warnings, spraying her with the hose (sorry, Phoebe), tying string around her leg to off-balance her, and now, never letting her be unsupervised around Phoebe. I'm considering chicken diapers, blinders, a rooster (but I worry a rooster will just spread the "hens losing feather from aggressive mounting" around...)
The perpetrator and victim: