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Thank you for this. Our main goal of having him is for protection . We like to free range our girls and any extra help is what we need. We have good space for him and we lost a hen to a fox so he will occupy her space. My goal is to put a wire dog pen in a spot in their run for a week or two, after quarantine, and see how they respond to each other. I’m not sure if I should eventually introduce them in the run confined or when I let them out to free range. Also, should he be confined for a bit to learn his new run and coup?I personally don't put any faith in how breed affects anything other than size and physical appearance. Each individual chicken has its own personality regardless of breed. You can get great roosters of any breed or horrible roosters of any breed. Why do you want a rooster? What are your goals in regard to having him? That will determine the fit better than breed.
A True Blue Whiting is not a recognized breed, more of a type that lays blue eggs. They can be about any color. If you hatch eggs from him and your girls about half the pullets should lay green eggs, half should lay brown. Half will have black feathers from the Australorp half, not sure what will happen with the Whiting portion.
Your hens are mature. At five to six months he is still an immature cockerel. It is a hormonal age but it can be challenging to predict exactly what will happen when you add him to a flock of mature hens. It may go well, it may not. A lot depends on his personality and maturity level. A lot will depend on the personality of your hens, especially the dominant hen. It is now her flock, she may willingly accept him and his dominance, but probably not at his age. Over the years I had one five month old cockerel take over a flock that had mature hens. It was a peaceful takeover, as calm as you could wish for. The hens were all pretty laid back and he had a fairly strong personality. He was able to win them over purely by his force or personality and did not need to rely purely on physical strength.
I had a cockerel that took 11 months to take over an all-hen flock and it was far from peaceful. Most of the hens would willingly mate with him but the head hen would not. If he tried to mate with one in her presence she would knock him off. She would not go out of her way to beat him up (some hens would) but she certainly would not allow him to mate where she could see him. When he hit 11 months he finally stood up to her. For two days whenever she would approach the flock he'd attack her, especially trying to peck her head. She was never seriously injured and after two days of this she finally accepted his dominance and they became best buddies. Some hens have been seriously injured or killed during this process of changing flock dominance. Some cockerels have been seriously injured or killed during this process by hens. Sometimes roosters are seriously injured or killed when they fight over flock dominance between themselves.
Most of my cockerels have been able to take over around 7 months and it is usually a fairly peaceful event but you don't get guarantees as to whet will really happen. So much depends on the personalities of all the chickens involved, especially the cockerel and the head hen.
How much room you have can be very important too. The more the better. I can't tell you what will happen with any assurance but one real possibility is that the girls will keep him at a distance, pecking him and attacking if he invades their personal space. It may not take him long to decide he needs to give them a certain amount of space and keep his distance. He needs room to keep his distance.
It is possible he will be allowed to mingle with them. Some may accept him more than others. You don't know how it will go until you try. I'd suggest you give him as much room as you can, try to not force him to share tight spaces with the girls, and provide extra feed and water stations so they don't have to compete for resources. The same kind of stuff you do for any integration.
It may be kind of rough for a couple of months (hopefully not) but if you can stick it out until he matures enough to really take over you should have a nice peaceful flock.