Thank you for the info, I haven't quite figured how I am going to divide them up but i have a few ideas. Does anyone think its possible for a 8 month old cockerel to "cover" 18 hens? (He is a early May chick)
I have 8 laying hens with my 10 Brahmas. The layers are white & green egg layers so I know which eggs I want for hatching but that seems like a lot of hens from one boy. It would however be the easiest to just cull the "undesirable" rooster and leave the one. Would make for the least amount of work for me and the least amount of disruption in the pecking order. Any thoughts.
"cover" I don´t even know if this term is used in the chicken world, but it shows you´re into horses!
It´s a good word.
Here I have my Brahma cock with the Brahma hens I want to breed him with...I keep him with about 4. (Actually, one is a brahma-mix non-broody and I know which are her eggs, too. She´s just to keep him quiet when the others are brooding.) He´d quite easily manage more, but I don´t want to breed him to the others, being closely related. I keep my ISAs and Dels in a separate pen for eggs, because things can get confusing when an egg-layer chicken wants to lay her eggs in the brooding hen´s nest. It causes disruption. Being large, Brahmas can and do break their eggs that they´re sitting on, so an added risk would be another hen (or 3) trying to get into the same box.
Is your 'undesirable' rooster really undesirable, or is he a close second? If he´s really undesirable, let him go elsewhere/pot, or if he´s quite good, put him in with a second group for back-up, in case something undesirable happens to your desirable one? Or, of course, you could just get another as needed at a later date......I´m looking out for another decent Brahma cock-bird to 'cover' the other Brahma hens, then I´ll have 3 groups...2 of brahma, 1 of egg-layers. Just what I do..
Edited to add: I just keep a rooster if I want to breed him, otherwise I´m feeding something for nothing. Also, they´re pretty tough (health-wise) birds I find. And my laying hens are quite happy without one. In fact, it lowers the risk of injury. I´ve had 2 hens injured by a cock´s claws, so my breeding hens now wear jackets, and the layers are left as they are. Just another thought on it.