@Faraday40 I'm so sorry about cuddles. She was a beautiful girl!
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@Greenthumb83Hands on practice would be awesome. That's so cool that you guys do that. I'm not afraid of cleaning them...just that cut that ends their life. I've never killed anything. My family has no farming background and I've never pulled the trigger whenhunting. But It gives me so much pride to start a farm, so that my children grow up this way. We are starting with pigs in Spring and I'm really excited about that.
That's a new one on me! Lol@tmarsh83 You know what "they" say... Whistling girls and crowing hens, Both will come to no good ends. [Always wondered who "they" are... "They" say a lot of things, it seems.]![]()
That's usually how it goes here. Littles are taught to wait until after the big kids eat. It's a pecking order thing.![]()
Integration started this weekend. We've been feeding treats at the run fence for a while now, and some limited free time for the littles, and inside run time for the bigs just to get them together. There's been some squabbles when the littles get to close to feed, but other than that it's been pretty tame. They all roosted together last night, and are runned together today. The bigs also need to get used to the new roll out boxes, so this could be interesting.
But while I was uncovering things sunday morning from the frost, the boss lady did this several times. She's such a mouthy thing. I need that cochin to grow up and put her in her place...
@browncow15@browncow15
It could be as simple as just having gotten some weak birds from shipping.
If they were mine, I'd try giving them some good brewers yeast. I have started doing that "free feed" even with the tiny babies. I just put it in a pile in their feed pan and they always go for that first.
The other thing I'd try is giving them some tiny pieces of grass-fed meat. Do not leave meat out. Once they get that it is food, give them just what they'll eat while you are there then remove anything not eaten.
Some poly-vi-sol in their water [NO ADDED IRON] or some Poultry Nutri-drench if you want to go the fast, synthetic way.
That's usually how it goes here. Littles are taught to wait until after the big kids eat. It's a pecking order thing.
You may have to wait awhile for your roo to "put her in her place" for a myriad of reasons.
1) Cochins are slow to mature. He's not going to be full size until his second birthday, but he'll be big enough by his first (more than likely) and will likely to be trying to get in their pants between 5 and 7 months.
2) Dominant hens are loathe to relinquish control to a boy.
3) Despite all the rape that can go on with roosters, hens have an acceptance threshold. They pick who they'll submit to and when they'll do it, to an extent. They can drive off unwanted boys and deny them nookie (even though it gets them beat up). This acceptance can take weeks to achieve, especially if a dominant hen doesn't like him (other girls will follow suit and beat him up).
4) No one makes love well at first. Boys often have terrible form when they're just getting started, and this doesn't bode well for their acceptance as dominant roo over the flock. Most hens will take a chivalrous, older, more experienced man every single time... rather than settle for some klutzy kid built like a fridge who has no idea how to wield what God gave him. Your boy's more likely to win a Heisman than to be stealing any hearts... at least for awhile.