SwampPrincessChick
Crowing
True, especially with over 160 decibels in your backyard.Noise ordinances will trump that.
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True, especially with over 160 decibels in your backyard.Noise ordinances will trump that.
She’s definitely not a young cockerel - over a year old and has been laying 4-5 lovely large white eggs every week for about 6 months now! I wondered about a spontaneous sex change but she’s young, and hasn’t stopped laying, eitherThis is the answer. Normally female chickens only crow on a rare instance that danger is nearby. Before I had any roosters, my hen Averie crowed when a coyote ran across the neighbors yard - after nearly getting hit by a car. She alerted the flock about that, but didn't do it ever again that I heard. A hen crowing all the time - like a rooster is like a one in a million chance - Yes, we are probably going to need pictures to confirm that its a hen and not a young cockerel.
Very good advice @SwampPrincessChick
She is! And there are no “challengers” to her authority, as far as I can tell from observing them. Tilly is not particularly dominant or “rooster-ish” in her behaviour other than crowing - she doesn’t peck or attempt to mount the others girls, but she’s first in and out of the coop at night/in the morning, and first to eat and drink, and she has no problems muscling other birds out the way if e.g. she wants to grab a snack or wants a specific place at the feeder.Is she at the top of the pecking order?
Try resetting the pecking order? It may get her to stop if she knows she’s no longer the top bird.She is! And there are no “challengers” to her authority, as far as I can tell from observing them. Tilly is not particularly dominant or “rooster-ish” in her behaviour other than crowing - she doesn’t peck or attempt to mount the others girls, but she’s first in and out of the coop at night/in the morning, and first to eat and drink, and she has no problems muscling other birds out the way if e.g. she wants to grab a snack or wants a specific place at the feeder.
I recently lost one of my flock, but the crowing escalation had already started a week or so before Bella suddenly passed away.
We don’t have any predator issues (I’ve checked my cameras and I’m in a very suburban area - I very occasionally see a sparrowhawk flying past, but never close enough to bother the girls) although we do have wild Guineafowl roaming the streets and roosting in nearby trees… they don’t come into my property, and neither do the neighbourhood cats really, because of my dogs but the Guineafowl will be audible and sometimes visible from the chicken run when they roost in the evenings (although the girls go into their coop around the same time?)
I also moved here in May, so if it was the Guineas, I would have thought Tilly would have started the crowing before now?
So... you are not allowed to have "crowing fowl" but screeching guinea fowl have free run of your neighborhood...She is! And there are no “challengers” to her authority, as far as I can tell from observing them. Tilly is not particularly dominant or “rooster-ish” in her behaviour other than crowing - she doesn’t peck or attempt to mount the others girls, but she’s first in and out of the coop at night/in the morning, and first to eat and drink, and she has no problems muscling other birds out the way if e.g. she wants to grab a snack or wants a specific place at the feeder.
I recently lost one of my flock, but the crowing escalation had already started a week or so before Bella suddenly passed away.
We don’t have any predator issues (I’ve checked my cameras and I’m in a very suburban area - I very occasionally see a sparrowhawk flying past, but never close enough to bother the girls) although we do have wild Guineafowl roaming the streets and roosting in nearby trees… they don’t come into my property, and neither do the neighbourhood cats really, because of my dogs but the Guineafowl will be audible and sometimes visible from the chicken run when they roost in the evenings (although the girls go into their coop around the same time?)
I also moved here in May, so if it was the Guineas, I would have thought Tilly would have started the crowing before now?
I tried - isolated her in a dog crate for a week (it also stops the crowing) let the other girls work out a new hierarchy and re-introduced Tilly. If anything I think it made the crowing worse! Also, second in command hen is the one who recently died, and the rest are very passive. Nobody’s really keen to take her onTry resetting the pecking order? It may get her to stop if she knows she’s no longer the top bird.
Tell me about itSo... you are not allowed to have "crowing fowl" but screeching guinea fowl have free run of your neighborhood...Strange World.