Dealing with a 1 year old rooster

Maureen in Chesterton

Songster
5 Years
Mar 22, 2020
28
69
116
Chesterton, Indiana
Last year our hens hatched a chick, turned out to be a cockerel. Our flock consisted of 5 hens & 1 rooster all 4 years old. This past April, when cockerel was now a 1 year old rooster, several hens had broken feathers on their back. My husband witnessed the older rooster driving the young one away, then very aggressively mating with a hen. Huh, we thought, it must be the older one who's become aggressive...so he was culled.

Wrong decision. Young rooster was very aggressive with the hens. He's also aggressive with us, charges us with spurs. We always have a wooden rake (as for raking leaves) with us when dealing with him.

We separated the young rooster, by keeping him in a separate 'big' yard which has high fencing but is open overhead (there are trees and some old glass doors that are angled out for shelter) during the day, the hens are kept in the adjacent 'little' yard which includes the coop and is protected on all sides as well as above. After we have enclosed the hens in the coop for the night, we let the rooster in the little yard so he's better protected from raccoons and owls. In this way, the rooster can see and hear the hens all day, he's on the other side of wire fencing, but can't touch them.

We did this for a few weeks, then let them all together again. The young rooster continued to be aggressive. We had 1 hen who seemed terrified of him - she hid in the coop. When she came out for food & water, young rooster would go after her. If she couldn't get away, she would cower low on the ground, I could see her whole body shaking. With another hen he was so aggressive, he ripped her comb off her head. We separated him again...it's been about 4 weeks now.

Meantime, we have 5 pullets, they should start laying in August. We have them in their own little coop, in their own protected little yard, and access / intermingling with the now 5 year old hens via a pop door between the 2 little yards.

The only reason we keep rooster at this point is for predator protection. I understand at 1 year old he's got raging hormones....but is there any reason to believe those will calm down enough for him to be a gentlemen with the girls within the next few months? Keeping them separate like this isn't giving the hens any protection. I question the point of keeping him.
 
As the unfortunate owner of an aggressive rooster, take the advice I have yet to and cull him. The predator protection is not worth the anxiety he is causing your hens.
Roosters are easy to find, as most people do not want them. If you really want another roo, look around on forums in your area to replace him and find a roo who will treat you and your hens well.
 
I agree, he's had more than enough chances to shape up and now it's time for him to ship out. He'll go wonderfully in soup

Any predator protection he is providing is minimal and is negated by the danger he himself is towards the ladies. Either have the ladies raise up a cockerel themselves or go and adopt a rooster that was too nice to cull from someone who aggressively culls for temperament if you still want a rooster. In any case never put up with a jerk, there are too many nice boys who need homes to put up with a jerk
 
As the unfortunate owner of an aggressive rooster, take the advice I have yet to and cull him. The predator protection is not worth the anxiety he is causing your hens.
Roosters are easy to find, as most people do not want them. If you really want another roo, look around on forums in your area to replace him and find a roo who will treat you and your hens well.
I agree
 
I totally agree with FrostRanger. Chickens have different temperaments, just like people. You have to get rid of the psychos. There are plenty of roosters out there who are gentle and protective of their ladies and just up for re-homing because of the gene pool. The more you keep him separated the worse he will become.
 

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