How cute!!!!! They're on my list for next time (which is over a year away) so maybe I can get a blue egg!!
Great explanation. As far as the squatting goes, I was equating it to dogs and submission. My male dog will submit to any dog he comes across so I wasn't sure if a cockerel that hasn't come into his own would submit to a hen higher in the pecking order. We'll see!! Thanks for the info... I love learning everything chicken.In my experience, that call is used to alarm the flock and make sure they are aware of potential danger. When my birds have had hawks fly low over their pen, for example, they have been silent save for a few clucks as they ran for their lives for cover! The alarm call is more of a warning to be on guard. This is one reason why it is speculated that they make he same call when coming out of the nest. It is believed that this is to get the flock looking, to make sure that as the hen is leaving the nest, there is nothing possibly sneaking up on her or her flock. This is all speculation, of course, but seems plausible when you consider how the same call is used otherwise.![]()
I have had hens squat for more dominant hens, but have never had a cockerel squat for a hen. That's not to say it can't happen, of course, but it would be unusual. The squat, again, is one of those things that people connect to one thing (mating behavior in chickens) but is actually another thing, and that is a sign of submission. That's why some hens will squat for other hens, especially in flocks that don't have a rooster to be the top bird. Roosters tend to be too proud to squat for one another and prefer to flee rather than show submission, but I have heard of it happening. So yes, we still don't know.Give her another month or two and hopefully she'll stay a she.![]()
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