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Yay for Ini mini!The good news is: Ini mini is laying again! Next month she will be 10 and her winter stops get longer every year.
<<< for the older ladies! Is it a problem to have a rooster in your neighborhood?When Tintin grows up to be a young/teenager boy:
Its a possibility to keep Tintin in the large nestbox/mini coop overnight where he sleeps now with his mothers. I have a roost for that mini-coop. And I could add some sound isolation to the ceiling muffle the crow a bit.
If I pick him up from the roost as soon as he starts to roost with the adults he probably won’t know any better.
Roosters are no problem as long as there are no complaints in my town.Is it a problem to have a rooster in your neighborhood?
Do you know your neighbours sufficiently to ask them ?
My rooster was crowing after dark yesterday. I was surprised, went outside to see why, and then I heard our neighbor's children screaming as part of their play outside, sounded like shrieking. No wonder Samuel felt he had to reply!Roosters are no problem as long as there are no complaints in my town.
And yes, we have a good relation with all the neighbours. The neighbour who found the previous cockerels a nuisance, often look after our chickens when we are on a vacation. When they are on vacation I often care for their cats![]()
. They don’t mind a crowing rooster during the day. But hate it when they wake up from one at 5 am.
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Others neighbours don’t mind/dont complain. One neighbour even loves the sound of a crowing rooster.

I had a bantam tribe free ranging in Catalonia along with Marans and crosses. They made a very solid and stable tribe. They took in one Marans cross when the Marans threw her out and Harold, the senior rooster made one very obvious invitation to another single hen a few years later. I liked them. I thought their social skills excellent. These were good foragers and more predator aware than the crosses in particular.View attachment 3528376View attachment 3528375
4 weeks now.
MDH and I considered and discussed to let the mama’s and chicks free range if we are in the garden as wel. But the bantam chicks, especially the Dutch are still so tiny that we are afraid that the cats, jays and magpies that all live here are too big a threat. My bantams probably would chase away the magpies and blue jays if they come near but not fierce enough to chase away cats. They were always too afraid to step into the run when a cat was inside.
On the other hand, it would be healthy for them and a way to learn how to be careful while they free range.
It still is a dilemma from my point of view. Give the bunch a natural surrounding and being very sad if a chick gets killed? Or protect them and keep the chicks confined for another 6 weeks in a run. MDH chooses the last option. But maybe I can convince him to try around 6 pm. That way they stay outside an hour before bedtime and they will return by themself.
Advice, especially from people who had bantam chicks with free ranging bantam broodies is welcome. If you know anyone who has. Please tag.
You could pop in at night with a clean white tissue and run it along the underside of the roost bar. You'll get red spots (mites On the tissue) if there are any there.These are excellent tips. I'm going to give the rolls a try and if I find any lice, I'll use the cardboard traps shown in the video.