TheTwoRoos
Crowing
- Sep 25, 2015
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She’s doing normal stuff,nothing wrong with what she is doing.If she ain’t causing injury leave her be.
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But when I tried to put her on the roost with the younger ones she pecked at one of them
There shouldn't be any reason to place an adult hen on the roost unless she got left outside in the dark or is undesirably sleeping in the nest box. She should be perfectly capable of getting up there all by herself in her own time.But when I tried to put her on the roost with the younger ones she pecked at one of them
Thank you for this. We had 6 10-week pullets and lost one to a hawk last week (it was awful!). Our coop holds 8, and we have a friend who raises chickens for sale, so after we beefed up security in the outer run we picked up 3 more girls from her this week. She only had 1 that was the same age as our girls (a Dominique), but she had a buff orpington who is 7 weeks and an ancona who is 12 weeks. We took all 3 figuring that their ages are close enough. Our 2 RI reds have been picking on the little orpie. She's holding her own, though, and they're not keeping her from eating or drinking. The "new" girls go to bed much earlier than the others, and the little isn't yet roosting at night, but she goes inside with the others. Our original group slept in a corner of the coop rather than roosting until they were about 8 weeks, so I'm not too worried about it. She'll find her place and there is plenty of space for her. It's hard to watch the bigger girls picking on her, but they haven't injured her so I'm inclined to let them all work it out. It sounds like I'm doing the right thing.There shouldn't be any reason to place an adult hen on the roost unless she got left outside in the dark or is undesirably sleeping in the nest box. She should be perfectly capable of getting up there all by herself in her own time.
My chickens all get up on the roost bar at different times during the evening. Leaving the chickens to do their own thing is always best. Pecking is normal behavior. Not roosting at night could be a sign of an illness or old age.
How funny that I read this just after I came in from closing up the coop for the night. The little orpie was up on the roost with the rest of the girls, snuggled up right next to the ancona. There have been no sounds of kerfluffle tonight, like there has been the past 2 nights, so it seems like they've at least gotten the sleeping arrangements all worked out. Fingers crossed!Older hen is going to peck young ones, that is just the chicken way. At roost time pecking and pushing are also very normal. Young birds need their own roost or a divider, it is a respect thing they haven't earned the right to roost with the older hen. They aren't viable flock members to her yet just another mouth eating her food and taking her space. Make a kiddie roost or an out of sight out of mind divider for bedtime peace. You won't need either in a few months, but it will help for now until you have to deal with the next drama....hormones.![]()
How funny that I read this just after I came in from closing up the coop for the night. The little orpie was up on the roost with the rest of the girls, snuggled up right next to the ancona. There have been no sounds of kerfluffle tonight, like there has been the past 2 nights, so it seems like they've at least gotten the sleeping arrangements all worked out. Fingers crossed!