Agrees, SLW.Ashley looks to be a silver laced Wyandotte.
Had one this spring that was schooling the cockerel before she even started laying.
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Agrees, SLW.Ashley looks to be a silver laced Wyandotte.
You are only partly correct. A male chicken is always a cockerel. A cockerel below a year old is a roo, and over a year, he is a rooster. A female pullet, though, is indeed a pullet until a year old.Correct me BYC Members if I'm wrong but think a male chicken is a cockerel until it's a year old then's considered a Roo. A female is pullet until it's a year old
A male chicken is a cockerel until he is a year old then he is a rooster or cock. He is never a "roo".You are only partly correct. A male chicken is always a cockerel. A cockerel below a year old is a roo, and over a year, he is a rooster. A female pullet, though, is indeed a pullet until a year old.
"Roosters have no concept of being embarrassed."
I truly must disagree. I had one nearly adult roo (around this fellow's age) that got his butt kicked by an older rooster in front of the whole rest of the flock, and he ended up hiding in a corner of the coop, refusing to eat or even move. I had to remove him, hand feed him for several days, slowly reintroduce him first to a very timid pullet, then another, a bit at a time for a few days at first. I literally had to build up his self-esteem again.
After a couple of months, you'd never know there had been a problem, but I know for certain that roos do, absolutely, have a concept of embarrassment. I believe what I saw with my own eyes.![]()
Scrabble(online) accepts a lot of words not in the dictionary.They finally accept roo in scrabble
I hate to disappoint you, but roo is, indeed, in the dictionary.Scrabble(online) accepts a lot of words not in the dictionary.