Dreamzchaser
Crowing
Muskegon.Where in Michigan is this? I would have loved to attend!!! Maybe next year!
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Muskegon.Where in Michigan is this? I would have loved to attend!!! Maybe next year!
I got 2 of Folly's chanty roos. One was the sire of the other and they are nice birds. Big Boy was great with the hens for about a year. Then Little Boy challenged his father for dominance and won that fight. LB has not been all that good of protector of the flock He is more interested sneak-jumping the hens and chasing BB around the yard. He has injured 2 hens with his aggressive style of mating. I haven't had a fertile egg since he took over the flock. Other than that the Chantecler roos are polite birds to humans and other pets. They don't even chase the ducks, squirrels, or chipmunks.I'm down to three roosters right now, and it's just the right number. Maybe somebody has extra cockerels, we don't. Try raising some chicks in spring, and keep one or two nice ones. Our white Chantecler cockerels from Cackle have all been polite birds, although we have moved most of them on at five or six months of age;
Mary
I have a couple of lavender? Australorps? JGs? They are missing feathers on their backs, one more so than the other. This is from Darl mating them, and he was NOT an aggressive mater. The other birds had no feather damage like this. I'm probably not going to hatch eggs from these two ladies, because of their weak feathers. Which is too bad, as one is my favorite.I really want to breed the lavenders.
I have 2 hens that are like that. They seem to be the favourite targets of Little Boy. He is not overly aggressive but he is sneaky. He will hide and then jump them when they come close.I have a couple of lavender? Australorps? JGs? They are missing feathers on their backs, one more so than the other. This is from Darl mating them, and he was NOT an aggressive mater. The other birds had no feather damage like this. I'm probably not going to hatch eggs from these two ladies, because of their weak feathers. Which is too bad, as one is my favorite.
Sometimes it's the hens that the rooster likes the most that end up with bald backs, not because they have feather weakness issues, but because the roos ride them much more than the other hens.