- You need a plan B, in case the rooster chick does not work out.
- We all know they are darling ... until they are not, and become the nightmare
- Being raised together has little influence on any chicken behavior
- How a rooster chick is acting today is no indication how they will act tomorrow
- A lot of rooster chicks become aggressive
- to pullets
- to other roosters
- to people
- There really is no way of raising roosters that will guarantee a great rooster...
Things that help:
- A lot of space, more than 4 ft squared for the coop, more than 10 feet squared for the run
- Older and bigger birds
- Not making him a pet, rooster chicks are not like puppies, where as when they are small, and you treat them good, they will treat you good.
- A long handled fish net, and a dog crate to separate a rooster chick if needed.
Inexperienced people tend to make excuses for their roosters behavior, they want this to work. Sometimes it does, but sometimes it doesn't. Things to watch for:
- Approaching you, jumping up on something to be as tall as you are
- excessive crowing when you come into the set up
- flapping his wings at you, puffing up trying to look bigger
- giving you the stink eye
- sneaking behind you, and running at you, even if not quite attacking, the attack is coming
Inexperienced people often vastly underestimate the violence of a rooster attack until they are in it. If you have small children under the age of 6 years of age, they tend to be attacked first, and can take it in the face. Children, then women, then men is the order of most rooster attacks.
After reading this, you might think I am anti-rooster, and I am not. I love having a good rooster in my flock, it is just not every rooster is a good rooster, a lot of them are not. The longer I am in this game, the more I think it is more random chance, than anything people do, but I do think roosters are best with experienced people.
Do have a plan B set up, have a plan with what to do with him, if you can't live with him. Can you cull him? A lot of people can't, and if so, you need a plan C.
Mrs K