H All,
I have my first batch of 15 chickens, of which 7 are pullets and 8 are cockerals. They are all between 14 and 16 weeks (4 months) old. The dominate cockeral, Roadrunner, recently started to regularly chase the 5 youngest (14 weeks old) pullets, scaring the crap out of them. Roadrunner is the cockeral I WAS going to keep as my rooster but now I'm not so sure. These 5 pullets he keeps chasing were introduced to the original 10 about 6 weeks ago and have not yet integrated with the original flock. All 15 chickens share a coop at night but free range all day. The 5 new ones run when the original 10 come around.
Roadrunner is nice to me, by the way. I think his hormones are just going crazy but me understanding this doesn't make the 5 younger pullets any less afraid. I worry about the stress this is creating as just today (it's been a bad chicken day), I had to cull one of the 5 (there were 6) pullets who had Marek's. So, I don't want unneeded stress to cause any of the others to have the virus become active as I know virtually all chickens have the virus inside them. The Marek's infected chicken was with the other 5 pullets for at least a day after she was symptomatic but I was too slow on the uptake (though it was a hurt leg from being chased) to quarantine her faster (yup, big mistake... ugh)
In any case, regarding my cockerals and pullets, if you were me, would you:
a) Do nothing and leave them to work it out
b) Separate all the cockerals from the pullets. I have a coop like space and fenced in run I can use for this purpose. They'll be able to see each other on occasion but not often.
c) Separate the cockerals I won't keep (which I'll prepare for the dinner table) but leave Roadrunner with the pullets and see/hope he settles down and stops terrorizing them?
What would you do? Much thanks,
Guppy
I have my first batch of 15 chickens, of which 7 are pullets and 8 are cockerals. They are all between 14 and 16 weeks (4 months) old. The dominate cockeral, Roadrunner, recently started to regularly chase the 5 youngest (14 weeks old) pullets, scaring the crap out of them. Roadrunner is the cockeral I WAS going to keep as my rooster but now I'm not so sure. These 5 pullets he keeps chasing were introduced to the original 10 about 6 weeks ago and have not yet integrated with the original flock. All 15 chickens share a coop at night but free range all day. The 5 new ones run when the original 10 come around.
Roadrunner is nice to me, by the way. I think his hormones are just going crazy but me understanding this doesn't make the 5 younger pullets any less afraid. I worry about the stress this is creating as just today (it's been a bad chicken day), I had to cull one of the 5 (there were 6) pullets who had Marek's. So, I don't want unneeded stress to cause any of the others to have the virus become active as I know virtually all chickens have the virus inside them. The Marek's infected chicken was with the other 5 pullets for at least a day after she was symptomatic but I was too slow on the uptake (though it was a hurt leg from being chased) to quarantine her faster (yup, big mistake... ugh)
In any case, regarding my cockerals and pullets, if you were me, would you:
a) Do nothing and leave them to work it out
b) Separate all the cockerals from the pullets. I have a coop like space and fenced in run I can use for this purpose. They'll be able to see each other on occasion but not often.
c) Separate the cockerals I won't keep (which I'll prepare for the dinner table) but leave Roadrunner with the pullets and see/hope he settles down and stops terrorizing them?
What would you do? Much thanks,
Guppy
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