Hi all,
I'm hoping for some advice here and I'll apologize in advance for the long-winded post I'm about to type, I'm over-thinking things as I go so I'm just going to share all my thoughts.
I'm new to chickens this year and while some things are going quite well (lots of delicious, beautiful eggs already!) others are not. We first purchased 14 straight run barnyard mix from a local farm. All went well, we eventually got them into the new coop and built a nice big run. We ended up with too many roosters and had to get rid of 5. I thought (hoped) after that the two we kept would be able to get on fine.
In addition, I had a friend who gave us two extra Americauna/Easter Egger mutt hens. They were younger than our birds so they were kept with the flock but separated by a wire barrier until they were big enough and everyone had ample time to get used to each other. I suspect I may have rushed fully integrating them with the flock though, as they've never been accepted and they actively work at staying away from all of the other birds. They do roost with one of our two roosters but he has also been shoved out by the rest of the flock as well so I worry that all three of them are being kept away from water, food, and play time in the run. Every time I go into the coop the three of them are hiding in there, it's just sad. They have no injuries or missing feathers, they're just living a crappy life as far as I can tell and I really want to change that. We're also now thinking that one of the younger Easter Egger mutts is actually a cockerel, which might not be helping things even though he's very quiet/gentle and definitely doesn't act like a roo.
To make things worse (first timer's mistake here... ) I have 5 more young pullets waiting to join the flock. I've decided to actually build them a separate coop for now, and have their run adjoining the main one, just in case they can't integrate with this flock when it's time. They're moving into their mini-coop this weekend, and will remain in their separate space until I get the rest of this sorted and they're old enough to join the other birds.
So here's what I have, and I'm hoping some of you can share with me how you would manage the situation:
8 hens (one of which is the rejected EE mutt)
3 roos (one very dominant, one very docile and clearly not liked by anyone but me, and one EE mutt also not accepted by the flock)
5 young pullets, nowhere near ready to join the big girls/boys
My gut says to rehome the dominant roo but I've hesitated because he does a fantastic job of protecting the girls when they're free ranging. He fought off a fox the other day and didn't even ruffle a feather in the process. However, he is clearly keeping the less "popular" birds from eating/drinking and generally enjoying an easy life. He also crows 24/7... I live semi-rurally so no one has complained yet but I know my neighbours can hear him so it's only a matter of time.
It would be nice to keep the EE mutt roo, in case do decide to hatch eggs down the road. He's a beautiful, gentle boy, easy to catch and check over, and generally just a really lovely pet.
As for the very docile older roo, he's beautiful but skittish and I definitely can't breed him because of his feet. I'd love to just keep him as a pet but I wonder if just his presence is throwing off the balance in the flock as he does fight with our dominant roo, and he's clearly not accepted and living his best life either. I would happily rehome him as a pet, but I think that would be next to impossible because of his feet. So if I don't keep him then I'm looking at culling... and that would totally suck.
I feel like I've rushed things, adding too many new birds in the first year, keeping too many roos, and just generally making rookie mistakes. So far no birds are injured or suffering and the hen pecking seems to be an acceptable level (thank goodness) but from here on out I want to do better.
Any and all advice is welcome as for which roo to keep, what to do with the two we don't keep, and even how you would integrate the 5 newer pullets eventually. And I will absolutely not be insulted if you point out where I've gone wrong so far - I really just want to learn and improve things for the whole flock.
Thank you in advance!
I'm hoping for some advice here and I'll apologize in advance for the long-winded post I'm about to type, I'm over-thinking things as I go so I'm just going to share all my thoughts.

I'm new to chickens this year and while some things are going quite well (lots of delicious, beautiful eggs already!) others are not. We first purchased 14 straight run barnyard mix from a local farm. All went well, we eventually got them into the new coop and built a nice big run. We ended up with too many roosters and had to get rid of 5. I thought (hoped) after that the two we kept would be able to get on fine.
In addition, I had a friend who gave us two extra Americauna/Easter Egger mutt hens. They were younger than our birds so they were kept with the flock but separated by a wire barrier until they were big enough and everyone had ample time to get used to each other. I suspect I may have rushed fully integrating them with the flock though, as they've never been accepted and they actively work at staying away from all of the other birds. They do roost with one of our two roosters but he has also been shoved out by the rest of the flock as well so I worry that all three of them are being kept away from water, food, and play time in the run. Every time I go into the coop the three of them are hiding in there, it's just sad. They have no injuries or missing feathers, they're just living a crappy life as far as I can tell and I really want to change that. We're also now thinking that one of the younger Easter Egger mutts is actually a cockerel, which might not be helping things even though he's very quiet/gentle and definitely doesn't act like a roo.
To make things worse (first timer's mistake here... ) I have 5 more young pullets waiting to join the flock. I've decided to actually build them a separate coop for now, and have their run adjoining the main one, just in case they can't integrate with this flock when it's time. They're moving into their mini-coop this weekend, and will remain in their separate space until I get the rest of this sorted and they're old enough to join the other birds.
So here's what I have, and I'm hoping some of you can share with me how you would manage the situation:
8 hens (one of which is the rejected EE mutt)
3 roos (one very dominant, one very docile and clearly not liked by anyone but me, and one EE mutt also not accepted by the flock)
5 young pullets, nowhere near ready to join the big girls/boys
My gut says to rehome the dominant roo but I've hesitated because he does a fantastic job of protecting the girls when they're free ranging. He fought off a fox the other day and didn't even ruffle a feather in the process. However, he is clearly keeping the less "popular" birds from eating/drinking and generally enjoying an easy life. He also crows 24/7... I live semi-rurally so no one has complained yet but I know my neighbours can hear him so it's only a matter of time.
It would be nice to keep the EE mutt roo, in case do decide to hatch eggs down the road. He's a beautiful, gentle boy, easy to catch and check over, and generally just a really lovely pet.
As for the very docile older roo, he's beautiful but skittish and I definitely can't breed him because of his feet. I'd love to just keep him as a pet but I wonder if just his presence is throwing off the balance in the flock as he does fight with our dominant roo, and he's clearly not accepted and living his best life either. I would happily rehome him as a pet, but I think that would be next to impossible because of his feet. So if I don't keep him then I'm looking at culling... and that would totally suck.
I feel like I've rushed things, adding too many new birds in the first year, keeping too many roos, and just generally making rookie mistakes. So far no birds are injured or suffering and the hen pecking seems to be an acceptable level (thank goodness) but from here on out I want to do better.
Any and all advice is welcome as for which roo to keep, what to do with the two we don't keep, and even how you would integrate the 5 newer pullets eventually. And I will absolutely not be insulted if you point out where I've gone wrong so far - I really just want to learn and improve things for the whole flock.
Thank you in advance!