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- #21
TabITSWD
Chirping
I agree with the folks who say that once a rooster/cockerel is acting and giving the signs he'll be aggressive, its just how he's going to be. I've had roosters be so bad you can't even handle them except by snatching them from the roost at night. I also have a rooster who was so sick he couldn't hold his head up and while usually giving me plenty of room, he was excellent about letting me do whatever to him to care for him and after he was healed, returned to respectfulness and giving space. He is the head roo so I wouldn't go through all that for a lesser rooster but he is valuable because he is well behaved and rules his pen with a minimal amount of physical aggression.
Which is why I think if you have friends who have a well behaved rooster then you should nab some fertilized eggs from them. The pattern I've seen in my chickens has been: roosters who are well behaved often have sons who are also well behaved.
Which is why I think if you have friends who have a well behaved rooster then you should nab some fertilized eggs from them. The pattern I've seen in my chickens has been: roosters who are well behaved often have sons who are also well behaved.