Still trying to resolve Maryanne/Hazelnut dilemma (https://www.backyardchickens.com/forum/viewtopic.php?id=87225), can I ask for help one more time?
Hazelnut is a campine, and like her 5 brothers (all now rehomed) needs to switch to decaf. She would have been terrifically successful as a corporate executive - first female CEO of the entire world, I expect - except for having been born a chicken. Her "get in my way and I will peck you hard" approach is becoming a problem however - she has my Chantecler cockerel's bottom bald and starting to bleed (the two pullets find her annoying but stay out of her way well enough), and she bit poor lonely Maryanne so hard that Maryanne seriously tried to kill her (nearly succeeded, too).
In your experience, do chickens who are, by breed, "active and high-strung" (and bitey) tend to settle down with time and when put in a larger flock; or is she likely to stay the same or get worse?
(Am trying to figure out whether to try a double switch - move Hazel in with 9 sussexes and try Maryanne with the 3 chanteclers - or whether to leave Hazel in with chanteclers (cockerel's bottom notwithstanding) and see if Maryanne can live iwht the sussexes).
Any insights would be REALLY appreciated, I just do not know all that much about chicken and flock behavior and could really use a hand here.
Thanks,
Pat
Hazelnut is a campine, and like her 5 brothers (all now rehomed) needs to switch to decaf. She would have been terrifically successful as a corporate executive - first female CEO of the entire world, I expect - except for having been born a chicken. Her "get in my way and I will peck you hard" approach is becoming a problem however - she has my Chantecler cockerel's bottom bald and starting to bleed (the two pullets find her annoying but stay out of her way well enough), and she bit poor lonely Maryanne so hard that Maryanne seriously tried to kill her (nearly succeeded, too).
In your experience, do chickens who are, by breed, "active and high-strung" (and bitey) tend to settle down with time and when put in a larger flock; or is she likely to stay the same or get worse?
(Am trying to figure out whether to try a double switch - move Hazel in with 9 sussexes and try Maryanne with the 3 chanteclers - or whether to leave Hazel in with chanteclers (cockerel's bottom notwithstanding) and see if Maryanne can live iwht the sussexes).
Any insights would be REALLY appreciated, I just do not know all that much about chicken and flock behavior and could really use a hand here.
Thanks,
Pat