Wow this thread moves fast! It's fun to hear about all the things everyone is doing to get ready for spring. Working on my dad to get him to warm up to the idea of chickens. We had a bad experience with them once when we were newly transplanted city people. Local grain elevator offered 20 free chicks with purchase of 50lb feed. Well us dumb city slickers ended up with 20 White Leghorn roosters! One was so mean he rode the neighbor's dog halfway to the road before jumping off. That was 30 years ago, and we've learned a lot about country life since then, but Dad still has "fond" memories of sending them all to freezer camp as you all call it. lol
Mom and I have narrowed our choices down to a total of 8 hens: 2 buff orpingtons, 2 barred rocks, 2 gold laced wyandottes, and 2 Australorps. Dad has helped us come up with the best place for the coop so we can have access to the barn electricity and water, but it is a bit secluded. On one hand it is good, in that there are a few pine trees in that corner of the yard(old horse pasture), but I don't like the fact that it is bordered on two sides by a small drainage ditch that is grown up with brush and trees. Seems like it would be too easy for predators to slip in and out. I can build the coop and the run to be as predator free as possible, but am now rethinking the no rooster thing. It might be a good idea to have one to protect the hens? How do those of you with roosters deal with fertilized eggs? Maybe a dumb question, sorry I'm new to chickens. And do you coop your roo with the hens all the time? That would mean any fertilized eggs would potentially be crosses, which as long as they're not show chickens I assume is ok? And if we ever decide to let a hen hatch a brood, how would we know what the chicks would be?
Also, suggestions on which breed's roosters are the least aggressive?