Whenever we bring a bird up close we wear cheap dollar store reading glasses for that very reason. They are fascinated seeing their own reflections in the glass yet your eyes are protected at the same time if they peck at the glass 🥸
This whole reflection thing reminds me of Grandma being inside the house looking at herself in the oven door prior to us getting a new oven.
IMG_0839.JPG

Also, there is something funny for you all for Caturday tomorrow.
 
She is pretty. How did your flock react to her visiting? I have had a turkey sort of visit 3 times since I've had my flock. Twice just walking on the hillside and once it flew low across my yard to the other hillside. Each time my flock lost their ever loving minds and very loudly raised the alarm. Hawks do not panic them as much as when a turkey visits.
I get turkeys reasonably frequently and my Princesses just ignore them.
Strange.
 
They are white winged and Eurasian collared doves. Ring neck look almost the same as Eurasian collared doves. They all make different sounds 🥰

This is a white wingedView attachment 3876003
This is a Eurasian collaredView attachment 3876004
This is a mourning doveView attachment 3876005
And Inca doveView attachment 3876006

These all come to my yard for dinner that's how I get pictures of them.😅😊
They are very pretty birds. The Eurasian collared doves are particularly striking looking.
 
Branch was about a month and a half older, but, he too fell in love with my hand. It was a shock the first time he tried that, had never had it happen before with my other boys. He tried to "love" my hand for about 3 weeks. It sounds like both boys are very similar in personalities and me and you treated them the same. Branch has always been a cuddler, so even when I suspected he was a boy I still held him. When his "attentions" started I realized real quick he got worked up if I were to pet him as he walked by. He was never aggressive, but a pet resulted in a bite to the back of my hand, most time trying to catch my shirt sleeve and then he attempted to breed my hand. After the first time I was ready and pulled my hand away and never let him finish. The bites never really hurt either but I had to nip that in the bud. In all this I never stopped holding him. I loved my snuggle boy and did not want to loose him. What I did was stop stroking his back as he walked by and that was hard for me to break. Instead I would pick him up and let him settle in my lap and pet him. He never got worked up if he was in my lap and me petting him, ever. I did focus my attentions though to massaging the back of his neck and base of his wings, that is his sweet spot and to this day he melts when I rub him there. Once he discovered and got brave enough to take on the ladies he forgot all about my hand. Also after discovering the girls I resumed stroking his back as he walks by, still do to this day. Sparring with his sister is normal. I would bet sometimes she initiates the sparring, that is just establishing themselves in the pecking order. He may be little, but, you need to NOT intervene with the big girls. They will thump him, but they will not hurt him physically. His pride, yes, that will be hurt and he will be rightfully taken down a few pegs. It needs to happen to all young roosters. Mr. P and Bert they too need to whip him, let them do it. He will be a better rooster in the end for whoever ends up with him with the lessons and beatings your flock teach him.

Now, I want to focus for a minute on Miss Little Chicken. Being a bantam she has the potential to lay soon after the 5 month mark in October. I am going to venture a guess right now that first egg comes the last of October to the first week of November. If so, who cares about the weather I am betting within 2 weeks of laying that first egg she is broody. Little chicken will put your silkies to shame in the broody department. She shall need to be watched like a hawk. She is little and she may already be showing it but she can fly and fly well. Your hay loft, it will not be safe from her. Actually you need to familiarize yourself with all the tiny out of the way spots now. She will find them and more that you would not think a chicken could hide in to make a nest.
Thanks Rebecca hahaha, just as I was getting over whiskers being broody now I have to worry about Mrs Little Chicken 😳

She can’t get into the loft it’s all enclosed - so unless she cans slide open a hatch I think she is safe from there - feed buckets and hay nets are a different story I guess!

Actually I have been worried about her, the feathers on her neck are seeming very pointy to me. I will do some video this weekend. 😟
 

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