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- #81
- Jul 23, 2010
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All roosters have the potential to be aggressive. Partially it's genes, but usually and mostly, it's the person.
As I stated in the first post though, this thread is for people who do want to take the time to work with their roosters and not resort to culling, and who don't want to get hurt by those little birdies anymore. There has not been one rooster I've encountered that these techniques have not worked on.
If you have little kids, or an ostrich, then you have real reason to worry. I understand that no one likes to be attacked, even by something that small, because some people really have gotten serious injury, but it a behavior that can easily be trained out.
This thread is for those people who want to learn how.
If I didn't have tolerance for any aggressive rooster, I would never have learned anything about them.
As I stated in the first post though, this thread is for people who do want to take the time to work with their roosters and not resort to culling, and who don't want to get hurt by those little birdies anymore. There has not been one rooster I've encountered that these techniques have not worked on.
If you have little kids, or an ostrich, then you have real reason to worry. I understand that no one likes to be attacked, even by something that small, because some people really have gotten serious injury, but it a behavior that can easily be trained out.
This thread is for those people who want to learn how.

If I didn't have tolerance for any aggressive rooster, I would never have learned anything about them.
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