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I ran from my rooster

My rooster is about 7 months old now and hasn't challenged me until today. I was taking care of things around the run and he came up to my side and flogged me a little. I turned to face him and did the foot stomp towards him and kinda flapped my arms and beat my chest and made an angry growl. Surprised him. For the next few minutes I would do the foot stomp whenever he got close. That was all this morning and he's not being bossy now. It seemed to work, but we will see.
 
Carry a stick or something, and encourage him to move out of your way at all times. Walk through him, never around, and do it all calmly. The yelling and waving often makes them worse. He's tried this once, and it won't be the only time!
He's also likely to challenge every human he meets, so be ready, and have zero tolerance if children are involved!
Mary
 
:gigHave you ever heard them running upstairs or down stairs? It's the funniest thing ever. All you hear is loud banging and at the last step they jump and a poof of dust flies from underneath them!
I think my boy has learned he cannot do that on the coop steps, he's too big! But watching him come down from the roost bar is comical sometimes, I always know it's him by the loud thump he makes!
 
Just my two cent's worth. Rehoming the rooster without telling the new owner what he is in for is irresponsible. If the new owner knows he is aggressive, that's OK. In my opinion the best new home for this rooster is the crockpot. Either yours or someone else's.
Perhaps before dealing out death a little education for the OP may help. They can learn how to behave and also try a few breaking tactics before condemning the bird. Triggering an animal does not always mean the animal is at fault or unworkable. It means some learning is needed, and the OP hasn't really given any more details on the matter such as age of the bird or any past instances of behavior.
 
Sounds like you were nervous about the rooster before this whole egg chucking fiasco.
Unless you find just a true jem of a guy then this scenario will repeat even if you change birds.
Your fear is taken as an danger signal, a reason to him to get you away from his area because you're up to something or you aren't right.
Not the answer you want to hear im sure, but consistent calm is your only hope.:)

I have to disagree with this one, @Chickassan. I was "consistently calm" and confident around my previous rooster Mike because I had no reason to fear him - until the day he died at my hand because he attacked me from behind with no warning and, when I turned to face him, came at me so viciously that I limped for weeks afterward.
 
Just my two cent's worth. Rehoming the rooster without telling the new owner what he is in for is irresponsible. If the new owner knows he is aggressive, that's OK. In my opinion the best new home for this rooster is the crockpot. Either yours or someone else's.
Ditto Dat^^^


the OP hasn't really given any more details on the matter such as age of the bird or any past instances of behavior.
Here's some history.....
 
I've only had roosters that got aggressive when they were at that hormonal stage and they calm down afterwards. Right now one of my Jersey Giants has only attacked us twice in 7 months, the other one did it once and it was MY mistake no matter what anyone tries to say.

I think too many people try to off a cockerel without ever giving it a chance and they are missing out on a lot of good roosters for the future. I would rather try everything I could possibly do than give up. I'm not the type that just gives up because it's the easier option. I'm the person that does every possible thing to ensure that I did everything before I raise the white flag.

Most Cockerels get aggressive when they're hormonal. If I killed every single cockerel that has walked on my property from being aggressive, I would have none. The cockerels are doing their job. It is our job to train them to act the way we want them too, chickens aren't mind readers. Some are unable to be trained, but some work out in the end.

I have never had human aggression be passed on from my chickens. That to me is like saying all pit bulls bite people... All animals in this world have the capability to have aggression towards humans, most aren't savage beasts though... Humans have fear of many animals, which to me is ridiculous since we are the top of the food chain.

The rooster that hurt me was about 4 years old, not a cockerel.
 

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