Molting chicken meaner than hell!! Whats up with that??? help!

LauraG

Songster
14 Years
Apr 13, 2010
347
5
234
Upstate, NY
OK, my barred rock is molting pretty bad. Looks terrible.

But the worst part is, as soon as she started molting, her behavior totally changed. She is like a wild woman- crazy skittish and when I CAN corner her and pick her up- shes SCREAMING for her LIFE!!
barnie.gif


Now, mind you, this chicken used to jump up on my lap and want to be held and pet. She followed me around and was a real sweetheart. Very, very tame

Now, shes a crazy maniac!
hu.gif


Does molting = behavioral changes?

Anyone have any similar experiences or thoughts on this??
 
One of my RIRs recently went through a serious molt and she was very cranky about being picked up until the feathers started really coming out. Not to the extent that your chicken is experiencing, though.
 
Molting is hard on them, I have one chicken that acts completely different when she's molting. It may feel very uncomfortable to them when you pick them up during the molt. She'll get back to normal when she's done molting. She's not broody on top of the molt is she? That would really make her wacky. Acting like the mad hatter.
 
Last edited:
Molting birds are protecting their incoming feathers by distancing themselves from others, including you, that might pick at blood feathers as a potential food source. THey are also more vulnerable to predators at this since flight capacity reduced (in breeds that can fly).
 
They can have complete personality changes while molting. It actually is quite uncomfortable for them, even painful to be picked up sometimes. One of my friendliest hens became a complete psycho during her first big molt. She was crazy, ran around the coop like an egg beater, screaming at the top of her lungs if I just looked at her.
 
I hadn't considered the discomfort angle before, but if you think about it, this is the time when birds are the MOST vulnerable to predators and so their behavior changes. I use to work on a campus with resident Canada geese and so would see behavior changes throughout the year, the two most profound being during the spring and late summer. Spring was breeding season and they became downright territorial...any approach would provoke an attack. Late summer was molt time and completely opposite behavior, they stayed in a tight group and maintained a distance with any approach. They were very quiet, almost non-vocal during this time. Since they can't fly (greatest defense against predators) at this time, the behavior changes profoundly. Now chickens aren't strong flyers like waterfowl, but it's the same. Their feathers are their armor, they spend alot of time on maintenance (preening, dust bathing), so during the molt they feel VERY vulnerable and 'out of sorts'.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom