They're very good boys. I'll even give you a full refund for every eyeball they remove.![]()

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They're very good boys. I'll even give you a full refund for every eyeball they remove.![]()
I'm planning on making some films to document aggressive behaviours and responses to human interaction. I just need to find a mean rooster first. I've asked around a bit but nobody has one for sale.
I know, huh?? I'm sure there are dozens of people that would gladly hand me their mean rooster for free, but I didn't want to post a formal ad at the feed store as asking for a mean rooster sounds really suspicious and could possibly attract shadier types of people. I'm sure someone I know will come across one eventually.Oh, if only, I would have loved to give you mine! He was a great specimen.
There really isn’t no amount of time you can spend working with a rooster, or no method you can use to raise a rooster to be right, aggressiveness is within its genetics, being a good care taker of his girls comes with good genetics and lots of times older flock members help tasing younger roosters.There are many people who rehabilitate roosters,though.Raising over at least 12 males and only ever having one be aggressive, but being that I didn’t raise it,they all have been extremely friendly, and do their duties well.
But I also watch for the little things.I catch any and all behavior directed towards me whether it’s aggressive or not.If it is,I usually shew the rooster with my hands, or step through it moving it out my way, but this is when the bird is extremely young,2 to 3 months.
I agree, most of it is from genetics. D'Anvers that I didn't handle ever went aggressive at an early age. I just bred from the nicer ones.This is exactly what I do, I basically ignore them I guess. I don't hold any of my chickens as chicks really and I'm tripping over them daily when I go to feed them. They get as friendly as I care for them to be without anything extra. I have 5 roosters and they all just move out of my way and go about their business, and I go about mine.
This isn't to say that historically in my life I've never had a mean rooster, but there haven't been many.
When I was a kid, a family who was supposed to get only hens gave my family a Wyandotte rooster.I know, huh?? I'm sure there are dozens of people that would gladly hand me their mean rooster for free, but I didn't want to post a formal ad at the feed store as asking for a mean rooster sounds really suspicious and could possibly attract shadier types of people. I'm sure someone I know will come across one eventually. View attachment 1766849
They're very good boys. I'll even give you a full refund for every eyeball they remove.![]()
I handle my rooster fairly often, he's not very fond of being held or petted, but he never tries to hurt me. When he was young, he pecked me a couple of times, and the advice I received was to completely ignore it or pick him up. If you retaliate in any way, they see you as being someone they can fight...if you don't do anything, they think you're invincible and won't bother to try it anymore! How well behaved a rooster is also really depends a lot on the breed and his personality.Thank you for the replies! Unfortunately, I thought the more you handle them as chicks the better they behave themselves when they grow up. So I've been holding him and petting him a lot, carrying him around and stuff like that. I guess that's got to stop now. I've heard that if they peck your arm as chicks, you need to train them not to do it right away. (Never happened to me, but he did it to my mom once). How would you do so, or does it really not matter that much?