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- #11
Larrycauna
Chirping
- Oct 11, 2017
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Thanks for responding. My wife said the lone pullet was looked lonely. So I put them in another cage and put them in with her for the night. When I checked the next morning she was laying on top of the cage. So I let them out. She ushered them to a laying box and layed with them. After a while they all got out and ate, drank and wandered around the coop. That night they got back in the laying box. Like a routine. Today she rides herd on them but they seem to do their own thing. She does encourage the four to stick together and seems to get pissed when the fly. She is always alert because we have cats. But she just keeps an alert on them. I have never seen her overly aggresive just annoyed. Sometimes she chases the wild birds away. All five are Americaunas.As @chickens really states, it's unlikely this pullet is actually taking over the nurturing of the chicks. Here's how you can tell if this young pullet is actually nurturing these chicks or simply interacting with them on a peer basis.
A few years ago, I had a six-year old hen all of a sudden out of the blue decide to take over the rearing of four six-week old chicks I had brooded myself. She actually developed broody hormones that put her in the mode for nurturing chicks. The clue was the "broody cluck" she would emit as she interacted with the chicks. Only broodies emit this sound, which is a rapid, low key popping, sort of like an old kiddie push toy sounded like.
It's not unheard of for even young chicks to take over the care of younger chicks. Usually these are Silkies, a breed known to want to be mothers.
Your pullet isn't being "mean" when she pecks at and orders the younger chicks around. This is simply how she communicates. The chicks will let out a startled chirp when she does this, but it doesn't mean they're harmed in any way.