Odd Hen behavior

Richards hens

Hatching
9 Years
Aug 20, 2010
3
0
7
I am new to having hens arround and recently 3 of my girls began exhibiting some strange behavior. When ever i am walking towards them they stop squat, duck their heads and shrug their shoulders out so i pick them up and carry them arround for a bit and when i put them back down they go back to their usual selves. I will admit it does make rounding them up out of the garden when its time for bed easier. All but one of these girls just started laying about 2 weeks ago arround the time that the behavior began.
 
Its the ONLY way I can catch mine
lol.png
Thank heavens for the egg squat!
tongue.png
 
I feel honored by the hens squatting for me. I always give them a gentle skritch on the back of their necks and down between their shoulder blades, then a pat on their backs. They stand back up, fluff up their feathers like it... well... "was good for them" -- and then they go on their happy little ways.
 
thanks everyone for the responses its nice to know that is completly normal it definatly makes catching the two leghorns easy.
 
i have 5 birds and 1 of them does that squating thing too when i walk into the run if shes close to me in the run when i reach my hands out to pretend to grab her she squats down right were she is then i pick her up and pet her
 
I LOVE this board! I found my girls did this and I simply assumed they were being "protective" or mildly aggressive, as in "I am too big and scary for you to pick up so back off" .

Now that I found THIS post, I am laughing. So I am their rooster eh? LOL, wonder what Elvis will think of that when it comes to mating time!

I am so glad that this is normal submissive behavior. They do tend to peck at my jeans or my shoes hoping for a tasty morsel. They come running (again very funny to watch) when I have ANYTHING in my hands, including a camera.

Now that I think about it, I have a question, when I pick them up, they fluff up their neck feathers. I smooth them down and soft talk to them, because I thought it was that mildly aggressive thing again. So the question (based on another couple threads I read) is are they fluffing up their neck feathers so I can grab them while I do my rooster duties? Is that what roosters will do, similar to cats? (glad I am not a cat or hen!
wink.png
)
 
The pecking at jeans, shoes, just about anything, isn't aggressiveness; they have no other way to explore/investigate things (no hands, only beaks). Not sure about the fluffing up at the neck, although it doesn't sound like aggression. Mine fluff up when I put them down, or after I give them a pet when they squat. I've read that this fluff/shake would normally help move things along after mating so that the eggs could be fertilized. Maybe when you pick them up they're puffing neck feathers as if in preening??? Sounds logical anyway...lol
tongue.png
 
Last edited:

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom