I chose Delawares First and hand raising chicks so they would be friendly. I got some buff orps second about a month later and kept them apart till the buff orps were about 18 weeks or so.I've been reading your posts. You've got some good experiences with your breeds. You sound like you have much more space than the small cottage backyard we have. We once had 25 acres but in our current place are limited/zoned to only 5 hens! I guess we should be grateful since many surrounding communities aren't zoned at all!
I know nothing of P/Ps except for your nice reviews of them and another BYCer was losing hers and sending them for necropsies with weird medical reports returned on them.
I'm not a fan of Orps in a coop environment. These girls are rather active and bothersome as chicks from videos I've watched. I saw a gang of 6 Orp chicks running around the coop purposely disturbing 2 sleeping ducklings and then nipping and bothering a couple Leghorn chicks minding their own business scratching around the ground. Had a friend with an Orp that was rather dominant in a closed coop also. As a broody she was overly fierce. I'm accustomed to our gentle Silkie broodies (and even a gentle Leghorn broody once) so when I saw our friend's combative fierce Orp broody I couldn't figure out why she wasn't in a soup pot. She was slightly calmer after raising her brood but not really a cuddle bug. I guess the key here is that some breeds really don't do well in confinement and need lots of pen space or need free-range. I know breeders want to defend birds by saying you have to do selective breeding for good temperament but sometimes a breed is just what it is. How many years have Marans been bred here in the U.S. and they're still unpleasant in mixed flocks.
Wellies are not a huggie breed but they do seem less combative than Marans. We and our friends have had different varieties and obviously different lines of Marans and they appear outwardly calm but in mixed flocks can be nippy to downright obnoxious. Barnies are calm but I haven't come by too much feedback regarding their pet status - because of their large size I would hesitate having them in a mixed flock. Penes/Empies are like the Mediterraneans - terrific for production but human contact is not their thing.
I adore Leghorns for so many reasons and grew up with them. However it saddened me that these girls are way too assertive for my gentle backyard flock and I had to re-home them. I tried both a Buff Leg and a White Leg and surprisingly the Buff Leg was more aggressive than our White Leg! For blue eggs we went with the gentle-tempered Ameraucana rather than CLs. CLs have Leghorn breed history in them so I've stayed away from CLs because the Leg temperament might pop up in some successive generations. Same reason I stay away from BRs which I've had before - they've had game bird and possibly Malay crossed in their breed history and some other breeds to make them more dual-purpose whereas the Dominique which BRs originally came from have stayed basically untouched. I love all these birds for different reasons but they don't necessarily make one good mixed flock.
It boils down to a matter of fancy and what breeds are the goal to fit a purpose - ornamental, utility/production, pet, game bird, etc. and then don't put them together. For us we chose the gentle breeds temperament first, and egg production/color is less important. We get less eggs with gentle non-combative breeds but don't miss the drama queens or bullies in flock politics.
I also got a Pita Pinta from Debi at about 13 weeks and I had grown out a CLB girl roughly the same age (she lost her male cage mates about this time as they started in on the crowing)
Ive found that spending time with them in a feeding situation reinforces the friendliness.
This season I tried hatching some myself as well as Debie helping me hatch some shipped eggs. I started off with Cream Legbars and Some Pitas normally CLB are not very friendly but raised with the Pita's they calmed quite a bit and the girl is even willing to be handled often enough. (Boys will still be boys)
Next I happened on to a single Delaware egg from Neals breeding pen and it hatched and it needed buddies so I got the buff orps again from feed store. I had also had shipped Barred Holland eggs and only one of those hatched so I got a couple more Pitas from Debie The whole gang of 8 birds are so sweet they will give you tooth decay
About 2 weeks behind them were a group of Hybrids (RIRxWhite Leghorn) and Delaware eggs I was trying my first hand at hatching with. I ended up with only 3 chicks and Neal had lost a leghorn to a fox so I added 3 hatchery Leghorns to this mix after about 4 weeks I integrated all the babies and the normally flighty leghorns seemed to be be less so and the 2 hybrid birds were much more friendly than I expected. They would let the buffs beg for the attention but they would let me pet them and even pick them up without much fuss.
I want to try Welsummers in the future but Im pretty sure Ill raise them as chicks with some Pitas. Pitas are easy to handle friendly and calm.
I started a regiment of wet mash feedings after 4 weeks to get them used to me providing food and promote being handled. It has worked so far. The only group I did not do it with had no Pitas in the group and and were very skitish (the Delaware was the only semi friendly bird in the lot) The Hybrids and Partridge Cochins (we bought) were all skittish but they are only about 6 and a half weeks now. (They have gone over to Neals to live who will spoil them rotten for sure)
I have some Cream Legbars about 2 weeks old with some 3 week old Pita Pintas and they well on their way to being easy to handle. the Pitas flock to my hands usually whenever I go to the brooder. They like to be petted and paid attention to.
The CLB with them seem easier to handle than their nature would suggest.
I think most all chicks are skitter bugs till about 4 weeks when they start to take more time figuring out the world, but Pitas seem friendly from the get go.
