Kidnapping the Hens

CalgaryFarmer

Songster
10 Years
Oct 13, 2014
434
157
196
Just outside Calgary, Alberta
Having 1 rooster and 5 hens with 13 in the grow-out pen and 36 chicks on order, I had some serious chicken math issues. Okay, I need to downsize my flock. (If you are having chicken math issues yourself, the minus sign is a valid operator, but you will not find it on any chicken math calculator.)

I had 4 great hens that were not part of my future plans, nobody else was selling hens locally, so it was a good time to sell.

Local ad, interested buyer, 4 hens gone the next day, cash in the pocket, happy buyer.

Okay, but I was just not prepared to take the blame for reducing my rooster’s hens down by 80%! He is actually a good guy, 10 months old, and I did not want him to be angry at me. Who knows what goes through their tiny little brains!

So I ushered him and the remaining hen into a separate part of the coop, with its own window, food and water and where he could not see the dastardly deed. I then came back later to snatched the hens. Of course he could hear all the commotion and he was vocalizing his concerns.

A day later, I am walking around like nothing is out of place other than asking him: “Where are your girls?” He seems to be crowing a lot more though.
 
He'll get over it quickly when he's introduced to your younger pullets!
That is what I thought, though he does not seem to be acting that way, which I found surprising.

During supervised integration, he was going after the interlopers. I am not sure if he is just going after the cockerels or pullets as well. I will watch more closely next time.

Maybe it is a dominance thing only where he just wants to make sure everyone knows he is the boss. But really, I got the sense he was trying to get them to move elsewhere, as in, this is my place and you are intruders so move along. But of course I am most likely guessing at best.

Maybe it is an age thing with the pullets.

I had a young female and a young male, separately, out with me at our fire pit and he showed quite a lot of interest, walking a ways to investigate, leaving his harem of one hen alone. They were on my lap so he could not show overt aggression.
 
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