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"We had the egg-laying song belted out loud and clear this morning. Echo might be a bit of an applause junkie..." @Ali James
Haha, that reminds me of what happened this week.
I heard an awful ruckus from the chook run. I went belting outside afraid someone had caught their leg in the chicken wire. No, it was Alice. She was standing in the coop doorway at the top of the ramp singing her egg song for the first time at the top of her voice.
It is the most raucous , out of tune sound I've ever heard from them. I thought she had lost a leg, not laid an egg!![]()
Jinx is spoilt beyond belief but he is my fur baby and can get away with almost anything!Jinx is lovely. I have a tuxedo too ~ only he leaps into the run to join me & makes everyone nervous!Gorgeous pictures & I must share Shadrach's theory on the egg song. He free ranges his girls in Catalonia & has observed that their rooster escorts each lady to her preferred nesting spot. When she is done she calls for him & he escorts her back to the flock ~ more a safety issue than a triumph song.
I also have girls that like to be escorted & will call & someone [usually Soda] will escort them to & fro.
Jinx is spoilt beyond belief but he is my fur baby and can get away with almost anything!
Interesting theory about the rooster escort; it makes perfect sense from a survival point of view. So the rooster is at the "peck" and "call" of his ladies!
The person to talk to about that is @Shadrach. Not everyone agrees with his observations but he has 3 *tribes* & tells some funny stories of hen's sneaking behind their rooster's back to mate with a different rooster & how the rooster will often mate immediately after egg laying which ensures his genes are the fertilising ones. I don't think roosters can tell if chicks aren't theirs but like I said, I don't have a rooster so I can't say from personal experience.Kirby is stunning (and I bet he knows it too!).
Yes, he does!
As you say, from a survivalist point of view, Roosters are programmed to do anything they can to spread their genes. It makes me think, they must have brilliant memories and intelligence to know where each and everyone of their ladies like to nest, to know who is present, and who needs rounding up etc.
Do you think they are like lions in that they know which cubs are theirs? Would a rooster know whether any chicks are 'his'? Do they tolerate chicks that have been produced by another rooster? Or am I waaaaayy overthinking things?!