Yes, and Yes.My husband said he is trying to get the tallest stand point to view. To me this is likely a dominant behavior ?
Females will shoulder hop if allowed/encouraged.
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Yes, and Yes.My husband said he is trying to get the tallest stand point to view. To me this is likely a dominant behavior ?
You have a very good attitude about the situation and that will serve you well! I wish you the very best with your rooster. A good one is worth his weight in gold!I want my eyeballs to stay in place I just want to try my best in raising him right. I do understand it may not turn out the way I hope. But it is worth a try. I defiantly don't need a cuddle rooster. That is defiant;y not what I am trying to do. That is why I am so surprise of him seeming clingy. And I did not even start handling him until last week. I let them come to the hand.
this this this! I just made a post about teenage boys yesterday. Ah, how we never stop learning- even 23 years in to this. My cuddly Freckles, now being an attitudy jerk.I've found that cockerels are much more friendly while young than hens. It's a major problem because who doesn't like a friendly cuddly young cockerel. Unfortunately this changes as they mature and if you are not aware of it and don't see it coming it is very easy to end up with a human aggressive rooster.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/articles/understanding-your-rooster.75056/
My mother loves roosters, her grandfather befriended them all even though he grew up on a farm so they may be dinner the next day. Generally, having chickens perch on you is harmless and a good way to bond. My mother had a rooster named George, a leghorn, who protected his hens but respected and even loved us and would perch on her arm. He had lots of personality, was quite fun, and the best roo we ever had. He wasn't completely docile, he got into tangles with the other roos who tried to topple his flock leadership, (who she subsequently re-homed), and he fought with predators, (we think it's one of those fights with predators that killed him). But he was never aggressive to people unless he felt they were threatening his hens, and that didn't include us just hanging around them and picking them up. I think roosters have a bad rap, and like dogs it has alot to do with how you raise them. If you handle them more they'll be generally less aggressive because they'll be used to being handled, not more. We did have a really mean rooster named Cheif, but I don't think we raised him from a chick and he was a breed that's known to be aggressive, and I don't think he liked to be held and he certainly didn't perch on anyones shoulder! Those roosters that are handled less tend to be MORE aggressive in my experiance, and docile roosters are certainly a thing.I have my chicks that was hatched. Right away I knew one was a rooster. He’s only two weeks old. He was so noisy in the beginning so I named him brutest the rudest.
However I’ve noticed him being very friendly to us. He steps up, onto the hands and like to perch on the arm. Very polite and jumps off to do his business. He does hold his body high all the time and proudly stands tall.
My question is , will this condition him to over run us and not have fear? Am I creating a dominant roo? I know hormones haven’t started. He is a hatchery chick that I hatched a black astroloup. I don’t know if the breed plays a difference?