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- #11
Roseynose
Songster
- Apr 7, 2022
- 136
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Hmmm is there any way to tame this behavior?He's claiming them yes, but not the way a good rooster does. He shouldn't be attacking you or his hens.
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Hmmm is there any way to tame this behavior?He's claiming them yes, but not the way a good rooster does. He shouldn't be attacking you or his hens.
He sure is cute. I hope you can establish boundaries with him. He may calm down after the initial hormone rush ends. My guy has a little, but he still goes after me sometimes. Mine weighs all of 1 lb, so he sometimes tries to flap against my ankle. But he can't hurt me at all. If he were a big rooster, he would have been gone a loooong time ago. I should have rehomed this rooster, but I couldn't find anyone to take him. And I feel partly responsible for his awful behavior.This is them last week when they got along and they just got introduced to the new coop. He is a tiny bird.
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Yes they have a good amount of room and a few roosting bars in the coop and in the run. The pullets like to hide under the coop or hop on the high bars in the run when he's being a meanie. But I will try what you said with not hand feeding them. And handling him less.The fact that he is a pet must remain your secret, he must think he is a rooster. Especially, so especially, right now when he is in the middle of his first spring and doesn't know what's going on, therefore everything is potentially a perceived threat. Try not to handle him as much, and just work on establishing boundaries, which is respect for him as a protector, for the time being.
One thing I found is that the rooster likes to be the one offering the hens treats. He may in fact see you as a potential threat if you are "tidbitting" for the girls. Offer him the food first, by dropping it, not hand-feeding, and let him show the hens what he found.
Do they have plenty of room to get around, do the hens have places they can perch or hide from him until you determine if he is going to be an asset to your flock?
Just saw this great advice in another rooster thread and thought I'd mention it hereI don't make pets of my males and I make a point of walking through them regularly. I don't chase them or in any way attempt to interfere with them, I just *happen to* have something to do on the other side of the pen beyond the rooster and I make him move out of my way as I approach instead of going around him.
I am not part of the flock pecking order. I am the giant who brings food and I want them to treat me like a horse or a cow or a force of nature rather than a chicken.
Just saw this great advice in another rooster thread and thought I'd mention it here. Hope your guy works out and behaves himself!