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Hen mating another hen

3peeps

Songster
12 Years
Jul 4, 2007
367
2
139
So....one of our hens higher on the pecking order is "mating" our lowest hen on the pecking order.
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I just started putting our 6-week-old chicks outside within view of their coop, and noticed this interesting behavior yesterday.

We don't have any crowing yet, but this higher-up hen has been sort of growling at me (similar to a broody squak) when she sees me come out of the house.

I'm assuming this isn't completely rare, but is there anything that I can do to stop it? The hen low on the pecking order is getting kind of beat up in general.

We're putting in a larger run soon, and a few of the adults will be going to new homes to make room for the younger girls. Maybe they're bored? Overcrowded? Just missing a rooster?

Any ideas?
 
It is a pretty common occurence particularily when you have no rooster. Quite often one hen will assume the dominant role even to the point of crowing.
 
I am not sure there is a species that there is not some same sex mating activity displayed. On the farm I have seen male on male and female to female action displyed in Horses, cattle, pigs, dogs, cats, ducks, geese, goats, sheep. Look at a pen of cattle on feed and the riding of each other is a nuisance and in some cases drugs are fed to minimize. Bulls will ride a less dominate bull to its death.

Castrated animals do it also. It is an acitvity as common as the animals themselves, hardly worth note in my opinion.
 
Just a quick thought from me. I sometimes get hung up on semantics and gets me in trouble. I would not describe it as an issue. I would describe it as a behavior.

Dominance issue seems to define it as something that needs to be addressed fixed or otherwise dealt with.

Dominance behavior is just what they do.

Behavior in animals and pets that affects our ability to relate to them or other wise enjoy them may be addressed for our safety and or comfort. Other wise normal animal behavior is best left as is.

Example: Country kids see a horse poop and take no note. Kids that have no experience with farm animals see a horse poop or urinate and they ooh ahh and have a fit that a horse would have the bad manners to poop publicly.

This is not a behavior we would likely modify LOL.
 

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