Nupine, you have to understand something. A hen has a purpose (eggs) and if she has a crossbeak that can be managed and someone is willing to take the time, like my friend Lynn and her EE hen, Hootie, that is all well and good. Naturally, it may also depend on the severity of that. I know of stories of crossbeaks who just could not eat and died of malnutrition, not a nice thing at all.
If a rooster has a crossed beak and it is a genetic deformity that is passed on, what is his purpose? He should not breed, his primary function. He cannot lay eggs. All he can do, IF he can manage it, is eat and maybe crow and be a pet. But, let's be honest, how many people only want roosters as pets, and special needs pets at that? So, if someone wants to take a crossbeak rooster on as a pet, that's wonderful, but as a breeder, I cannot keep one. If it was a hen, sure, she could leave my breeding flock and go in my laying flock as long as she could thrive and I could handle her problem on a daily basis. We all must, as silkiechicken says, respect each others' management decisions with our flocks.
If a rooster has a crossed beak and it is a genetic deformity that is passed on, what is his purpose? He should not breed, his primary function. He cannot lay eggs. All he can do, IF he can manage it, is eat and maybe crow and be a pet. But, let's be honest, how many people only want roosters as pets, and special needs pets at that? So, if someone wants to take a crossbeak rooster on as a pet, that's wonderful, but as a breeder, I cannot keep one. If it was a hen, sure, she could leave my breeding flock and go in my laying flock as long as she could thrive and I could handle her problem on a daily basis. We all must, as silkiechicken says, respect each others' management decisions with our flocks.