- Thread starter
- #11
FatBurrito
In the Brooder
- Apr 21, 2017
- 58
- 11
- 46
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
If all 5 chicks are pullets then she could keep them all. I have yet to have a 100% pullet hatch. I have had 100% cockerels though.Oh she can't? She's keeping them all ATM
Age?Is my chicken a rooster? I don't know if the image showed up
With that much comb color at only 8-10 weeks of age it is a cockerel.I have some questions-
Is my chicken old enough to tell if it's a hen or rooster? If so,can you see already?
They will be fine.Can my chickens be separated if they grew up together,I mean I know they can but I feel kinda bad.
Like do they remember? Or even have friends
Is this male over a year of age? If so it's not likely he will harm them, though that is no guarantee. If he's just a cockerel then his behavior will be a little more unpredictable.Will my rooster attack my baby chicks?
You can, but it certainly is not fair to the hens. Even one rooster with such a small number of hens can be too much. Add more than one and you will likely have unhappy overbred hens. Sometimes it's so bad they hide in the coop and won't come out. The stress can also cause them to slow down on egg production or even stop.Can you have more than 1 rooster even if you only have maybe 3-5 hens? Is it still possible?
You can give away just the mom and chicks. However the answer I gave above still applies. How many chicks she can keep will depend on their gender. Unless she wants to build a separate coop and run for the males.Should I just give away the momma hen and her babies without the rooster? Would that work? Would the momma be lonely without another grown/adult chicken? And would I have too many roosters if my chicken that I previously stated that I'd didn't know the gender of was a rooster?
Sorry for so many questions
With that much comb color at only 8-10 weeks of age it is a cockerel.
They will be fine.
Is this male over a year of age? If so it's not likely he will harm them, though that is no guarantee. If he's just a cockerel then his behavior will be a little more unpredictable.
You can, but it certainly is not fair to the hens. Even one rooster with such a small number of hens can be too much. Add more than one and you will likely have unhappy overbred hens. Sometimes it's so bad they hide in the coop and won't come out. The stress can also cause them to slow down on egg production or even stop.
The same situation will apply to you if you keep the chicks. Something will have to be done with the extra cockerels that have hatched. A happy flock can only have so many males.
You can give away just the mom and chicks. However the answer I gave above still applies. How many chicks she can keep will depend on their gender. Unless she wants to build a separate coop and run for the males.
It looks like your unknown gender chick is male, so you have to decide what to do with him.
That is not only irresponsible, it's cruel. He needs to learn how to butcher them or give them to someone who will.However,my aunt has a coop overrun with roosters and the hens are so injured and scarred but my uncle won't listen when we try to tell them to give away their roosters.
He started to build a wall or a seperate coop for them,would that work?
That is not only irresponsible, it's cruel. He needs to learn how to butcher them or give them to someone who will.
He can build a separate coop for them but it has to have plenty of space for them to get away from each other.