Not Worried, But Watching

3KillerBs

Addict
16 Years
Jul 10, 2009
23,957
73,687
1,471
North Carolina Sandhills
My Coop
My Coop
I've got 2 boys and 21 girls, with the younger girls just coming into lay over the past week.

Ludwig, the Black Langshan, is 9 months. Rameses, the Blue Australorp, is 23 weeks tomorrow.

For the past month or so I've seen Rameses mating with the girls, with Ludwig standing there observing, almost looking puzzled if you can attribute that emotion to a cockerel.

Today I got photos of their interaction, which was a little more intense. Rameses herded one of the splits (I couldn't see her band, but I don't think it was Lickety, the largest), into the broody-breaker, where she squatted and submitted without vocal protest. But instead of the usual on and off he kept mating her repeatedly.

During this time Ludwig circled the broody breaker several times before finally entering and registering his objection with a few quick pecks that I couldn't tell if they were aimed at Rameses or the split.

He broke it up, they all left the broody breaker then Rameses mated with the split again and Ludwig came over to protest again.

I ended up breaking it up, gently booting Rameses off his hen, simply because they were in my way to get out of the coop.

The girl left, but the two boys stood there side by side, then wandered over to join the crowd at the dish of mash and cooking scraps I'd brought.

So,

They're not fighting.

But I think I'd better prioritize putting a barrier across the coop and dividing the flock because they do seem to be competing -- which seems likely to get rough on the girls even with plenty of them around and, as a general rule, the girls hang out with different males most of the time in their 250+ square foot coop.

0227221649.jpg
0227221649_HDR.jpg
0227221649a.jpg
0227221649a_HDR.jpg
0227221649b.jpg
0227221649b_HDR.jpg
0227221650.jpg
0227221650_HDR.jpg
0227221650b.jpg
 
The young rooster challenging the other one can lead to an increase in aggression in the flock. Remove him if he keeps pecking and tries to fight the other rooster to prevent injuries. When young Pullets aren't laying they won't submit and are unwilling to mate. Be watchful of your roosters behavior around the young hens. Some will force them to mate repeatedly which is hen abuse.
 
The young rooster challenging the other one can lead to an increase in aggression in the flock. Remove him if he keeps pecking and tries to fight the other rooster to prevent injuries. When young Pullets aren't laying they won't submit and are unwilling to mate. Be watchful of your roosters behavior around the young hens. Some will force them to mate repeatedly which is hen abuse.

I'm working on dividing the coop (it's 16x16 so there's plenty of room).

The young pullets are all coming into lay and the one who was being repeatedly mated in that circumstance was one of the senior pullets, who will be a hen next month. :)

The boys haven't tried to fight that I saw, just that one incident of interrupting the mating. I've been checking them at roosting time for evidence of conflict and haven't see any wounds on the combs or anything.
 
I'm working on dividing the coop (it's 16x16 so there's plenty of room).

The young pullets are all coming into lay and the one who was being repeatedly mated in that circumstance was one of the senior pullets, who will be a hen next month. :)

The boys haven't tried to fight that I saw, just that one incident of interrupting the mating. I've been checking them at roosting time for evidence of conflict and haven't see any wounds on the combs or anything.
You're probably right to divide it because those boys might get in trouble.Lol
 
In my experience roosters do that to each other from time to time and it doesn’t escalate to real fighting. The younger guy is just trying to see what he can get away with and will soon be reminded that he’s not the top roo. I wouldn’t worry about it too much.

I would close the broody breaker so no hen can get trapped in there again though.
 
In my experience roosters do that to each other from time to time and it doesn’t escalate to real fighting. The younger guy is just trying to see what he can get away with and will soon be reminded that he’s not the top roo. I wouldn’t worry about it too much.

I would close the broody breaker so no hen can get trapped in there again though.
x2
 
In my experience roosters do that to each other from time to time and it doesn’t escalate to real fighting. The younger guy is just trying to see what he can get away with and will soon be reminded that he’s not the top roo. I wouldn’t worry about it too much.

I would close the broody breaker so no hen can get trapped in there again though.

That's probably a good idea, but I should inform people that this particular pullet likes Rameses and hangs out with him.

It's really quite interesting to see how the hens, senior pullets, and junior pullets have sorted out between the two boys. It hasn't necessarily worked out by age group.
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom