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Andres is beautiful and looks impressive!
Your housing is totally different from mine, so in the end, you have to go with what works with your management. From the beginning, my best cockerels from my first group of NNs, Snape and Tank, did not get along with other males or each other (like, fight to the death), and I already had a Cream Legbar rooster who was also a solo dude with three hens in a separate well functioning family. So that sort of dictated my practice - I have multiple separate family groups with a male and several females in each, and they range in paddocks (that rotate based on condition of vegetation). I've been lucky so far that the three German New Hampshire roosters have mostly cohabited ok, they were raised together, are relatively calm by nature, and were separated from females early. But things are starting to get a little hairy this spring with them - as soon as I have the chicks from this spring grown out, I'll be rearranging the families and those boys will be given small families of their own and I can stop worrying that they will kill each other one day...
- Ant Farm