@Labsandchickens8 ~ this is an old youtube I've posted before but I always enjoyed watching these Wellie beauties:
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@Labsandchickens8 ~ this is an old youtube I've posted before but I always enjoyed watching these Wellie beauties:

Thats POW-worthy. I would say calendar-worthy, it really is great! But I think the rules are you have to always have the whole body in the frame?On this fine Monday, Hawk and Raven are having a dust bath under the trailer. Consider this an early Twofer.
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Depends on your aerial predators, and your tolerance for loss. All hawks are pretty smart and can evade any barriers that leave space for them to fit through. Woodland hawks actually are totally suited to flying in between things like string & branches. @BY Bob has video (I think) of a Cooper’s hawk hopping down through a tall bush going after finches. As one who lost a hen to a Red Tail hawk that flew around the edges of a piece of aviary netting set above like a rain tarp and trapped the hen against fencing, I recommend aviary netting secured on all sides.Question: I've seen pictures of chicken yards with some ropes crisscrossing open areas, I guess so hawks can't swoop down. Not actual arial netting. Do those work? Currently trying to create an open area for my poor confined birdies.
Actually, Mr. Chips may stick with his most willing, non-combatant hen (his mom). He might get better at grabbing others if he’s really amped up, or he may learn his manners with them and respect their wishes. From what I’ve read it depends on how high his hormones drive him, and that is very individual to the roo. Meanwhile, his mom is doing the others a favor taking the heat off!Well the hormonal idiot phase has started!
Mr. Chips jumped a passing hen this afternoon.
He picked the only hen laying at the moment, and the only hen who wouldn't beat the crap out of him.
Yup, had to be his Mom, Tassels.
She seemed fine with it the hussy!
Shocker.
My cockerel/rooster support group please stand by to provide reassurance as the next few weeks unfold. I have more ideas of places to jump up on and under so will continue adding.
Remember, he has to mess up to receive correction! If he doesn't jump on a girl who isn't happy with it, he'll never learn the difference between willing and unwilling. As sucky as it is to see, we can't really let human morality label a rooster as bad when he is acting appropriately for his species.Well the hormonal idiot phase has started!
Mr. Chips jumped a passing hen this afternoon.
He picked the only hen laying at the moment, and the only hen who wouldn't beat the crap out of him.
Yup, had to be his Mom, Tassels.
She seemed fine with it the hussy!
Shocker.
My cockerel/rooster support group please stand by to provide reassurance as the next few weeks unfold. I have more ideas of places to jump up on and under so will continue adding.
Well the hormonal idiot phase has started!
Mr. Chips jumped a passing hen this afternoon.
He picked the only hen laying at the moment, and the only hen who wouldn't beat the crap out of him.
Yup, had to be his Mom, Tassels.
She seemed fine with it the hussy!
Shocker.
My cockerel/rooster support group please stand by to provide reassurance as the next few weeks unfold. I have more ideas of places to jump up on and under so will continue adding.
I agree with @rural mouse : the black ones with golden hackles are most likely Black Sex Links. They are usually Barred Rock hens mated to a Rhode Island Red roo (sometimes a New Hampshire Red roo). They tend to have the good temperament of BRs, and are, in my humble opinion, beautiful and sweet birds.
At some point, she won't be okay with it. But for now, he will almost always try first with his 'mom' - remember the boys' fondness for @Ponypoor 's hand, and @RebeccaBoyd 's boots? (or was it the other way around?). At some point, he will try others, and get roundly thumped...and learn his manners.Well the hormonal idiot phase has started!
Mr. Chips jumped a passing hen this afternoon.
He picked the only hen laying at the moment, and the only hen who wouldn't beat the crap out of him.
Yup, had to be his Mom, Tassels.
She seemed fine with it the hussy!

Depends on your aerial predators, and your tolerance for loss. All hawks are pretty smart and can evade any barriers that leave space for them to fit through. Woodland hawks actually are totally suited to flying in between things like string & branches. @BY Bob has video (I think) of a Cooper’s hawk hopping down through a tall bush going after finches. As one who lost a hen to a Red Tail hawk that flew around the edges of a piece of aviary netting set above like a rain tarp and trapped the hen against fencing, I recommend aviary netting secured on all sides.
Lots of hawks can and will fly through and around things. I had a Red Tailed Hawk recently dive-bomb a hen, missed, hen ran into thick underbrush, and hawk pursued on foot - right into the thick of it, until it saw me and took off. Coopers are notorious for flying in and through shrubby areas after prey. It really depends on how hungry/desperate they are, what they have learned from parents, and their past experience with success. (plus the type of bird/predator they are.)