So most likely sir screech a lot will not be staying. I had seen a small scab on one of my favorite hen's comb about a week ago but could not figure out how or why. It was just a small knick already scabbed over so left it alone. Yesterday I caught sir screech in action relentlessly and aggressively chasing my Australorp around the yard. Seriously, out of the coop, into the bushes, out of the bushes, and continued until he finally got her by the comb (not to mount), and is pulling on it. He continued to pull hard, even after she submitted, until I got there and stood between them. He has done this behavior before but I've never seen him grab a comb and draw blood. Plus it was mainly towards the other cockerels. But they have been gone for 7 days now and he appears to be getting worse. He started this behavior a few weeks ago with one of the Serama pullets (not near as aggressive) but I figured she was getting close to laying and he was establishing his dominance. I have yet to see him mount any pullet or hen though. I let the young cockerels go early thinking it would deter his behavior.
I'm not willing to watch him harass my hens and draw blood. I was really upset when I watched him guard the door to the run/coop and chase the hens out when they were going to roost for the night. As much as I love watching him and his girls in the yard I'm not willing to keep a rooster who is this territorial, mean to hens and is starting to follow me invading my space. I have had really awesome roosters who stayed with me until 18-20 weeks and move on to my friend's farm where they have become her favorite roosters. I could see it in their behavior from about 6 weeks and not one acted like this, ever!
I caught him before roosting time so the girls could get. He has been confined inside until now. He is no longer crowing, which makes me sad because he is alone. Can this behavior be stopped? Or is his personality as a rooster starting to show now that the other cockerels are gone? If he was breeding the hens I could understand it more but he is not even trying to. He has decided the coop is for his girls (the 2 serama pullets) and is defending it from the rest. This does not seem like a good rooster to keep in a yard of 11 hens when he's decided he only likes 1 or 2 of them. I'm worried about the young silkies as he could really hurt them!
I'd really appreciate some thoughts on this. I am wondering is removing him made his behavior worse or since he has been displaying this for a few weeks now it is not necessarily the 2 nights inside. Learning and understanding chicken behaviors is really important to me if I am wanting to keep a flock safe and happy.
Thanks!