Ikslo
Crowing
I would love it if mine moved to tree roosting. We’ve got good trees for that. They all just seem to prefer a roof over their heads at night.
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Over half of mine roost in a tree every night; the others choose the coop and I shut the door at night. Most of the ones in the tree have never slept in the coop. They go to bed when they choose and start the day when they choose. Everyone has freedom to free range all day long, anywhere they want to go.I have a question for everyone on this thread: Who all amongst you has full-on free-range survival chickens? I mean the roost-in-the-trees, not-shut-in-a-secure-coop-at-night kind? I just want to make sure it isn't a pipe dream for me to have a hands-off flock(s) in addition to my regular coop chickens.
Can you see any pattern as to how they split up?View attachment 4286881View attachment 4286882
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I think they have indeed split into separate flocks.
I didn’t see how the groups intermingled at roosting time, but I was able to find each flock roosting in their own trees a few trees apart on the edge of the farmyard.
Two pullets, one hen and a cockerel among the flock here choose to roost in trees, while the rest choose one or another coop. Some that now roost in coop roosted in trees when they were younger. The tree roosters are always down first and congregate around the 4 coops waiting for me to let the rest out at dawn.I have a question for everyone on this thread: Who all amongst you has full-on free-range survival chickens? I mean the roost-in-the-trees, not-shut-in-a-secure-coop-at-night kind? I just want to make sure it isn't a pipe dream for me to have a hands-off flock(s) in addition to my regular coop chickens.
There are two younger BBR cockerels that have grouped with the mature RJF hybrid rooster. The black mixed stag has no cockerels running with him. The black mixed stag has retained more hens and has retained the farmyard. Yet I’d say the RJF hybrid is dominant. His spurs are long and as last as last week (before I noticed the flock split), he was running the black stag around and the black stag was staying distance from the one overall flock.Can you see any pattern as to how they split up?