Culling Aggressive Rooster

Maybe she found it safer to her person because it was so sudden. She didnt have to wrestle a rooster somewhere and find an instrument...and so on. Hopefully better for the animal as well. More and more of the old ways are coming back.
A very good possibility, she wasn't a tall woman lol. They'd always talk how she'd walk out there, grab the meaner and do a quick flick of the wrist and no more. They never spoke about it flopping around like when they did larger quantities with an ax, so there's that too. But pappaw would tell us how they'd catch the roosters, chop and taler them flop. (Terrified my aunt at the time lol flopping chicken chasing her)

I grew up butchering, just never around the death. And that's my issue right now as we try to keep a sustainable system.
 
A very good possibility, she wasn't a tall woman lol. They'd always talk how she'd walk out there, grab the meaner and do a quick flick of the wrist and no more. They never spoke about it flopping around like when they did larger quantities with an ax, so there's that too. But pappaw would tell us how they'd catch the roosters, chop and taler them flop. (Terrified my aunt at the time lol flopping chicken chasing her)

I grew up butchering, just never around the death. And that's my issue right now as we try to keep a sustainable system.
Yes. I struggle with it too. The cone method is the only method I can use. Less confronting for all concerned for an amateur anyway.
 
So yesterday was the first day without him in the flock. I was out in the yard all day working on projects and the girls were so peaceful. Scratching and running around. None of the usual anxious chatter or bickering. They seemed to enjoy just meandering around and coming in for treats. Today they surprised me. For not being very social with people they were a lot more social than usual, coming to perch with me in the chair as I sipped my coffee and accepting scratches for longer than usual

Its crazy how peaceful it is. My alpha hen has relaxed a lot in her bullying since he isn't around to gang up with her and bully the other girls. I'm sure that in time that might change. And I was thinking about adding a couple of similarly aged hens to the mix but they just seem so happy that I may just leave it.
This was us. We had four Roos that were supposed to be hens. We culled two and I had planned on keeping the other two, but one roo kept trying to cover my girls and they kept running. Bertha, would chase him off and the other roo would attack him. My husband unfortunately couldn’t tell them apart and ended up culling the wrong roo. He had to go back and cull the one that kept attacking my girls. Now, we have no roos but the girls are much happier, even letting me pet them this morning while I was getting fresh water and hanging up their treats.
 
So yesterday was the first day without him in the flock. I was out in the yard all day working on projects and the girls were so peaceful. Scratching and running around. None of the usual anxious chatter or bickering. They seemed to enjoy just meandering around and coming in for treats. Today they surprised me. For not being very social with people they were a lot more social than usual, coming to perch with me in the chair as I sipped my coffee and accepting scratches for longer than usual

Its crazy how peaceful it is. My alpha hen has relaxed a lot in her bullying since he isn't around to gang up with her and bully the other girls. I'm sure that in time that might change. And I was thinking about adding a couple of similarly aged hens to the mix but they just seem so happy that I may just leave it.
Good to hear, I’m hopeful we will experience the same as you. Yesterday we put one of our cockerels up for auction and I’m actually pretty sad about doing so. He was the alpha and one of two boys out of a flock of six so the situation was not good. He was not human aggressive but did chase the other boy around and the hens took a bot of a beating between the two. Still, he was a good cockerel but just in a bad situation not of his doing. We had them all since day two and consider them pets with benefits so giving him up was difficult for me and I find myself worrying about his well being. I know this make me a weenie and that he is just a chicken but he was my chicken. Anyway, I’m hopeful that my remaining flock will be more relaxed as are yours.
 
Catch him in the dark,tie his legs and put him in a dog crate until daylight .Kill him away from the coop so the hens can't hear or see
Unnecessary torment. Kill quickly, and with respect; anything else is below the standards of ethics, which is the stock in trade of animal farmers.
 
Unnecessary torment. Kill quickly, and with respect; anything else is below the standards of ethics, which is the stock in trade of animal farmers.
Caging the rooster in a separate area from the hens so they can't see or hear anything is more humane.It also calms them down. Tying his legs until he's in a cage is for your own protection until he's in a cage or pen .Once he's safe inside his cage you can untie his legs.I would never awaken a sleeping animal and kill it where the hens would hear it.Thats horrifying
 
Early morning is best for me (been on the perch all night, no food in crop). Go in fast for legs and hold him upside down until he chills. Beware spurs and wing slaps. Then do the football hold until you’re situated.
My drakes I put in a wire kennel in the morning and hose them off thru the bars. Then leave them in the kennel a few hours - no food in the system and a nice clean bird. I wouldn’t do this with chickens, obviously, but the ducks don’t mind it.
I always ziptie the feet until afterwards…if something goes wrong you’re not chasing them around (ofc this has not ever happened to me, right? 😜
I do broomstick and it’s instant and way less messy, hang them by the feet after they stop flapping and everything collects in the head part, goes straight into the trash.
Nobody properly prepares you for the flapping 😔 I’ve had roosters jump and flap twenty feet away to where my husband said, are you sure it’s dead?!
The biggest thing if you’re eating the birds - age it! Several days. Otherwise it’s tough.
 

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