No is absolutely no reason for a Roo to be allowed to have his way like that and put little children at risk of blindness or physical scarring and pain. No sir. My grandfather had an old rooster that unprovokingly attacked his beloved dog and blinded the dog. Spurs are weapons.
Dear chicken fancier... it is Not your fault... you just got a roster with three of his four brain cells thinking he is the king of the world.
Simple solution:
Make a small batch of my Dr. Chicken's "discussion potion"...
(My grandfather's recipe)
Simmer one cup of water to boiling
add some freshly diced hot pepper and steep till cool (about one hour)
strain out the pepper ... leave the juice behind
add one dash of powdered ginger
add 1/4 tsp of salt
gently put potion into small spray bottle.
Now.... when "Mr. king of his world" starts getting aggressive... give one short squirt in the face.
two squirts of the "discussion potion" should send him into next week! So, use it only as needed. To assure proper strength... dab a little on your finger than put it on your tongue... if it stings... it's the right strength.... if it doesn't ... reheat potion and add more hot pepper. Chili peppers work just fine.
Before I start getting a lot of cards and letters.... yes, I know this is going to hurt the Roo, but not as much as the stew pot would which is where he is headed if he disfigures or blinds the grandchild of the coop master.
One ...maybe two ...separate "treatments" with my discussion potion and there will be NO further discussions or debates over who is the King of the coop.
Remember, your rooster is only as aggressive as you let him be. If he still wants to discuss his claim to the kingdom.... just give him the potion.
I have had only one rooster out of 8 need two squirts over two separate agressive episodes.
That is a good track record if you ask me. My most difficult rooster who demanded a second discussion was a RIR.
Roosters are like children... they want you to set boundries... they want rules... they respond to firm and consistant consequences to bad behavior... the potion is the consequence ... it works.
If your rooster does not respond to this treatment... you have a pit bull ... not a bird and you should seriously consider he be escorted to another coop in a far away land.... or, again, there always is the Roaster Pan.
(in this case the discussion potion is not wasted...it makes a good seasoning and can be sprayed upon Mr. rooster as he cooks) I don't mean this to be funny or a joke... it does make a good seasoning for fowl if you like it a little hot and spicy. Don't mean to offend those who would never cook a bad, mean rooster.... if I offended you, forget this paragraph.
Shifting gears... and looking into the not so distant future:
I am collecting data for marketing my discussion potion. for those of you who use it, please write back and give me the number of squirts needed to effect the desired behavior AND the breed of rooster. I will post the results later this summer.
Dr. Chicken