Hello Nifty
Thank you for your message
We are all well here thanks. I started with adopting 6 ex-batt hens and shortly after Abe nearly 8 years ago, I think, an elderly rooster, although the SSPCA always label them as young?! Have since expanded our flock, and intermittently adopted hens as well as roosters, and have given hatching eggs to several of our broodies ... unfortunately as it can be detrimental to the well-being of our flocks when the cockerels become a certain age, I will no longer let any broodies sit on eggs sadly ... the only rooster I have experienced who does not mind a jot, is our Fluffy, who we adopted before being slaughtered, he's now around 5.5 years old ... two young mental Poland roosters (from one of our broodies), one especially, is extremely rampant, and treads on as many hens he possibly can including one of Fluffy's girlfriends, and Fluffy couldn't seem to care less lol! He's absolutely fine with other male company. He is only bothered when they start trying to dominate him, and he quickly nips it in the bud, and all is fine again

Recently adopted 2 x pekin roosters (we are adamant now this is not going to happen again), I feel so stupid and not happy that I keep disrupting the flocks, and there's nothing I can do about it, as know for certain, where the man whom we adopted the pekins from, will simply continue to breed even though he can't or won't keep the cockerels!! He lives rurally, with a lot of land, wants to keep hatching yearly, then just wants to offload the poor cockerels to someone... had the cheek to tell my Husband he will contact him again ... no I don't think so! So glad we adopted these 2 lovely, funny characters but it's not right to keep doing it ... there will always be unwanted roosters, sadly! ... Were told they got a long well, they had been caged up together for a year, and were due to be slaughtered, but not surprisingly they started fighting regularly after they arrived here. They are both in their own garden space ... one lad has bonded well with one of our silkie hens, and she seems content with him. The other boy is still keen to get with his next door neighbour, Elderly Roddy's flock, but has settled down a bit, and has female company literally bobbing over into his garden space now and again, but an adopted gold top is with him most of the time, including herself and another adopted hen who roost with him.
Enjoying life here in rural-land, close to sheep ... not great with the added tick beasties, but the chooks help each other with that, and I of course help too. Just in case you didn't know ... dabbing teatree oil neat (only essential oil not to burn without carrier oil) directly onto the tick, makes it very easy to then gently just pull them off with a pair of regular tweezers.