It starts around 5-6 months old or so. They're all different and mature at different rates.What is breeding age?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
It starts around 5-6 months old or so. They're all different and mature at different rates.What is breeding age?
One is a barred rock and the other is an Easter EggerWhat breed are your roosters? Some breeds are more easy-going than others. Right now, I have 2 Orpington cockerels around 9 months old with a free range flock of around 14 hens, plus 3 "teenage" Orpington cockerels (maybe 3 months old?) that I'm growing out with the free range to decide which ones to keep as back-ups. All the boys get along fine. The older cockerels decided a while ago which one was the head of the flock but they both breed the hens and crow and have a generally chicken-y good time.
Conversely, we have an all-rooster flock in our sheep pasture, including "charity case" bantams, breeding stock grow-outs, and ones we intend for butchering. Even though it's an all male flock and the free range hens don't go up there, we had a LOT of problems with several of the roosters, mostly Olive Eggers, who spent their entire day attacking and "mating" the smaller or subordinate roosters. The mean roosters recently got sent to "freezer camp" and the remaining seven roosters get along perfectly politely with each other.
So I think it depends on breed, roaming space, and individual personalities.
Hallo! A friend of mine had a barred rock and a Rhode Island Red mix grow up together as cockerels, but didn’t want them and gave them to us. They free ranged, and were very friendly to each other. Of course, the first few days there was some pecking, and and occasion fight, but they were very brief. They quickly found out the pecking order, and lived with it. I think it just depends on the birds, and how easily they are willing to give up dominance.One is a barred rock and the other is an Easter Egger
This is the time I would start teaching those young cockerels that you are the boss. I would stop hand feeding them and holding them and start distancing myself from them. When they are old enough to go outside, I would not let them into my space. I would walk through them if they happened to be between where I am and where I want to be. I'd move them away from the feed and not let them eat unless I decide they can. It all sounds pretty cold and callous, but you need to read all the "Help! My sweet rooster attacked me!" threads. Almost all of them start out saying how he was handled, hand fed, and the friendliest as a chick.
It seems that the more they are handled, the more they think they are dominant over you. It seems that in the chicken world, respect is shown by giving ground. Staying out of a dominant bird's space. You can do as you like, of course, but I have been raising my cockerels this way for several years and have not had one turn on me yet.
All you can do is watch and see how they do. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.