- Mar 3, 2011
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Oops meant to say black, not balk... anyhow...due to downsizing, I am in need of rehoming several pullets and a cockerel. The two cockerels were best of buddies, but now at 8 months, one thinks he owns the coop and in the evening is sending the other cockerel out. Poor baby now has to wait for the bully to fall asleep to sneak in the coop and get a restful night of sleep.
Anyhow, bully cockerel is actually very sweet with me, he loves to eat food from my hands and (yeah, yeah) he has a soft spot in my heart. So I want to mark him in some way so I make sure I don't give him away tonight. Since he is al black, I will need something white. Maybe a bit of toothpaste on his head when I am feeding him?
Consider that my flock is free range, quite skittish since I got them and I never handle them. I can't just pick him up and put a zip tie on his leg, that would scare him to death, so looking for easy things like spraying him with something while I hand feed him that will last until this evening.
Also, any tips for making catching them easy? I am doing it when it starts getting dark at night and they are all in the coop ready to fall asleep. They are easy to panic, and I can imagine a mess when I try to catch them. I don't want anybody to get hurt (me, my helper and the buyer which is coming with her son). I am imaging the worst, with all chickens/roosters panicking and flying everywhere and playing hard to catch. My roosters are sweet and never attacked but wonder how they will act when I am trying to catch them and scare the daylights out of them.
Anyhow, bully cockerel is actually very sweet with me, he loves to eat food from my hands and (yeah, yeah) he has a soft spot in my heart. So I want to mark him in some way so I make sure I don't give him away tonight. Since he is al black, I will need something white. Maybe a bit of toothpaste on his head when I am feeding him?
Consider that my flock is free range, quite skittish since I got them and I never handle them. I can't just pick him up and put a zip tie on his leg, that would scare him to death, so looking for easy things like spraying him with something while I hand feed him that will last until this evening.
Also, any tips for making catching them easy? I am doing it when it starts getting dark at night and they are all in the coop ready to fall asleep. They are easy to panic, and I can imagine a mess when I try to catch them. I don't want anybody to get hurt (me, my helper and the buyer which is coming with her son). I am imaging the worst, with all chickens/roosters panicking and flying everywhere and playing hard to catch. My roosters are sweet and never attacked but wonder how they will act when I am trying to catch them and scare the daylights out of them.