I had ENOUGH Tonight

I believe in letting the grils settle their own pecking order issues. I observe but try not to interfere. However tonight was insane. Lilly had lost her mind. she was going up and down the roost knocking everyone off. It was like a game of king of the hill when you were a kid. She would knock someone off at one end and go to the other, knock someone off there then out on the enxtension to get someone. She NEVER goes on the extension. Then back to the other end, knocking hens off everywhere, it did not matter who. Squawk, Thump, Squawk, Thump, Squawk, Thump. At one point everyone was down and she was wiing for someone to get up so she could knock them off. I have never seen such behaviour before.

So I intervened.

I removed Lilly.
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I made her sit with me until it was too dark for her to mess with anyone. Everyone else settled down immediately. Maleficent even left the good spot for when Lilly came back.
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Everyone is resting quietly now. So strange. i will have to get video tomorrow if it happens again.
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Oh gosh! Have they all gone insane together? I put my 2 naughty ones back with the others this morning ~ partly because we are heating up & partly because we won't be here Tuesday to monitor~ & it was on! I've never seen such shenanigans from my lot. : Quiet now. It's got too hot to fight.
 
Chickens are crazy sometimes! I think you made a good call, sometimes you just have to be the Big Featherless Rooster that puts the girls back in order! Hopefully it was just a one time thing

Roosting has been nuts for a while now but Hattie has been the main instigator. Not tonight. Lilly started with just Hattie. Mal & Aurora waited as long as they could on the porch watching it go on but it was getting dark. They had to go in. Aurora even ran over to me at one point. I thought for a moment she was going to try roosting on my head again! :gig

Chickens be crazy! :barnie
 
I don't have the space to do flock self replacement. :( Or I would. However if I introduced a rooster my neighbours would be very unhappy, eggs or no eggs. :D I do buy from a reputable breeder & I do have [& will be adding more] Campines, who are both rare & endangered & whom I like enormously. My girls are supplying 1/2 the neighbours with eggs on our street. I'm not really keen on raising chicks...So my motives & aspirations & choices are different again. I'm still learning because last time my choices were even more limited. Now I know more I will make different choices in the future.
Joining in a bit late here...

It's very interesting to learn how things work in other places. There are big differences between my experience here in Adelaide and everyone else, even some differences between the market here in Adelaide and up in Brisbane near where @Ribh lives.

I don't know of any hatcheries in Adelaide that offer sales to the public. The egg and meat producers have breeding programs and hatcheries, but if at all, they sell pullets to the fodder stores who then sell the pullets to the public. Chicks in bins and chicks through the mail is unheard of, but fertile eggs through the mail seems to be a thing some breeders offer.

But I don't know anyone who's bought their pullets from fodder stores (apart from myself - my first three pullets were from the fodder store). Everyone I know with chooks can tell the story of where the bird was hatched and who hatched them. Mary and Janet were from breeders focussing on one or two breeds. My neighbours bred and hatched their own four hens (now 8yo and still laying when the moon is blue) and their new, younger hens (3yo and laying like clockwork) were hatched by their brother's neighbour. Sandy is an exception to the rule, having been found walking the streets.

The local council's "good neighbour" bylaws rule out noise, so most roosters are precluded from suburban flocks. So there's no point in fodder stores offering cockerels for sale.

But the chookless neighbours love my hens and bring their kids in to see them :) It's been a great way to bond!
 
Roosting has been nuts for a while now but Hattie has been the main instigator. Not tonight. Lilly started with just Hattie. Mal & Aurora waited as long as they could on the porch watching it go on but it was getting dark. They had to go in. Aurora even ran over to me at one point. I thought for a moment she was going to try roosting on my head again! :gig

Chickens be crazy! :barnie
At Janet's worst, I sat on my stool in the coop and watched her. When she was nasty, I'd stand up and she'd often behave. On really bad nights, I'd poke her with along stick (gently of course), thinking I was asserting my rooster/human authority, and that had an immediate positive effect.

Now that the roost is more conducive to chicken happiness, she's calmed right down and last night she only pulled on Sandy's shoulder three times.
 
Joining in a bit late here...

It's very interesting to learn how things work in other places. There are big differences between my experience here in Adelaide and everyone else, even some differences between the market here in Adelaide and up in Brisbane near where @Ribh lives.

I don't know of any hatcheries in Adelaide that offer sales to the public. The egg and meat producers have breeding programs and hatcheries, but if at all, they sell pullets to the fodder stores who then sell the pullets to the public. Chicks in bins and chicks through the mail is unheard of, but fertile eggs through the mail seems to be a thing some breeders offer.

But I don't know anyone who's bought their pullets from fodder stores (apart from myself - my first three pullets were from the fodder store). Everyone I know with chooks can tell the story of where the bird was hatched and who hatched them. Mary and Janet were from breeders focussing on one or two breeds. My neighbours bred and hatched their own four hens (now 8yo and still laying when the moon is blue) and their new, younger hens (3yo and laying like clockwork) were hatched by their brother's neighbour. Sandy is an exception to the rule, having been found walking the streets.

The local council's "good neighbour" bylaws rule out noise, so most roosters are precluded from suburban flocks. So there's no point in fodder stores offering cockerels for sale.

But the chookless neighbours love my hens and bring their kids in to see them :) It's been a great way to bond!
Very interesting. This sounds much more like how it is here. Lots of the chicken keepers here can and will (I'm equally boring :) ) tell you the family history of their flock. The members of the chicken club here were appalled when they read how people acquire their chickens in the US on BYC.
There are a few hatcheries in Spain now but in the rural areas people get their chickens from other chicken keepers; not really breeders, just people they know who have a flock. The base line here for most is they buy breeding pairs to start a flock. This can turn into quite a process requiring considerable debate about the merits of one flock over another.
There isn't the pick and mix culture of chicken keeping here. Most stick with one breed, usually the local breed because it has a proven record of thriving in the conditions here.
There are some specialist breeders here and they will sell you a breeding pair but you may have to wait months before you get them.
The last breeding pair I gave away went off with all their family details, any health complaints they may have had, what drugs if any they had been given, what feed they had and what I knew about their personalities. This is quite common here.
 

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