Chicken.Lytle :
Quote:
Good point. It is easiest to catch him at night on the roost or chase him into the coop and corner him there. This is why I prefer isolation over holding for shock and awe.
There are other ways to give immediate negative feedback. Spray in the face with water. Light physical contact (swat or shove) to cause offense as opposed to pain.
You can skip shock and awe entirely. Go straight to stalking. The speed walk stalking thing is like magic. You are much bigger than a rooster so it has a major psychological impact on a rooster.
Well said.
I hope I've been clear, in my posts I have advocated the
Light physical contact (swat or shove) to cause offense as opposed to pain. by way of a swat with a straw broom (see my last post). I don't think it is necessary to actually inflict pain to change behavior.
Shock and awe was not my idea. My thing is that the idea of holding and petting an unruly roo seems to me to be a recipe for potential injury to the person. Furthermore, holding and petting my aloof Rhodies hasn't made them more likely to be friendly to me. When I've done that they run from me. I don't see how that would work with an unruly roo
As for inflicting pain, we're definitely on the same page there, I don't see that as necessary or beneficial.
It is very interesting to see the things that stir up passions in this forum. This being a case in point. Another one was someone who posted pics of a stray cat that stalked her chickens, the roos ran off and the hens stood their ground!!
Anyway, the cat looked quite healthy and the poster said the cat was catching some mice and had been getting into their trash. Well, then you had people telling her that she should do 'this' and 'that' with the cat, bring it to a shelter, take it in, feed it etc. One woman even went so far as to tell the poster what brand of food she should be leaving out for the cat! Others were telling the woman that it couldn't have been the cat who was getting into her trash (she had seen the cat do so on several occasions) that it had to have been coons or opossum.
Interesting....