I'm starting to get very concerned...

You can tell if the roo is too rough just by watching....do the girls run from him in terror, or do they just squat and let him mate? A good roo is a gentleman. If he's really rough, the hens will run away from him or try to run away. If the roosters are really rough with the ladies, I would get rid of them.

Your hens will be just fine without a rooster. There will be a pecking order, but from what I've experienced, things went fine without a rooster. I've had one rooster that treated the hens fine, but he attacked me, so I sold him.

I do like having one rooster for my small flock because I like to let them free range and the roosters really watch over their hens. Plus roosters are beautiful.

Good luck to you!

Sharon
 
No, I think the girls would do just fine without a roo. I had a tiny little bantam cochin roo with my large fowl girls for over a year and they paid no attention to him at all. I do have a light brahma cockerel with them now and most of them don't really pay any attention to him either. He's a big un' too. I like him too...so I know how you feel. I would probably just limit the time he's with them some.
 
I have heard that the roosters mate more with the hens that are lower in the pecking order.
The reason being is that they are already more submissive than higher-up hens.

So thats really 2 factors here causing trouble, rough/excessive/regular mating, and low rank hens getting picked on from all ends, over and over again all day long.

I dont think removing the hens would solve anything, as theres always the next one in the pecking order.
Removing the rooster would definately solve the problem, hands down.
Or, start a new flock with all your lowest ranking hens, and have no rooster with them.

Every coop I ever seen that had many hens and a rooster had some birds that had terrible-looking bald, red, painful-looking patches on their backs.
 

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