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- #41
They will tango on and off in the spring time, but nothing more than some bloody combs come of it. Otherwise, one goes this way with his ladies and the other goes that way, etc. I think the most I've had (mature roosters) is six and it was much of the same. They've got a lot of room to spread out. Maybe it's that and a little bit of luck.Ive never been able to have 2-3 roosters all get along, sadly. I have 11 roosters right now.... 3 with ladies, and the rest in pens with other roosters. I feel so bad for them... not being able to free run. Some are going in the freezer this week because they became jerks over the winter, and even worse now that its spring fever here!! But Ideally I could have 3 that co-exist with my 35-40 hens. SIGH. one day maybe
......
And yes, you would have 1000 pics of hens "shopping" for a box. I watched a full hour of 15 sec videos of NOTHING BUT SHOPPING. LOL
I set up a game camera one time and put it on bursts of five
 I know what you mean!
 I know what you mean! 
	 
 
		 
			
		
		
		
	
	
			
		 
			
		
		
		
	
	
			
		 
			
		
		
		
	
	
			
		 Anyway, I'll be takin pics of the various olive eggs this weekend and will post them here next week.  Will also be takin some photos to submit to the current "natural egg photo contest" before the deadline passes.  Yall gonna enter that contest? I think u should!
                                                Anyway, I'll be takin pics of the various olive eggs this weekend and will post them here next week.  Will also be takin some photos to submit to the current "natural egg photo contest" before the deadline passes.  Yall gonna enter that contest? I think u should!
		 
 
		 Would be Nice to know who lays what.  But really impossible unless i hung around the nest boxes for a couple days and recorded hens/eggs as they went in and out of the nestboxes.                                                              The little pullet in my current avatar was about 3 months old in the pic.  She is a silver partridge Easter Egger. She is an exceptionally sweet and friendly pullet, & i thought the avatar pic somewhat captured her personality.  I change my avatar fairly often tho, gotta give others their "15 minutes of fame."                             I know its a bit off topic from olive egg colors, but wanted to say, my roosters dont fight with each other either.  Yes, lots of space AND keeping only roosters with great temperments for breeding are the keys. I started dividing flocks by age so i can use hatching eggs from younger hens to keep broody hatch rates near 100%. (I dont cull older hens; they have earned their retirement benefits.)  Before i started keeping separate flocks, had one giant flock of approx. 200 hens and 17 roosters.  Roos would ocassionally  posture and threaten each other, til one made his retreat and peace was restored.  They never actually never drew blood at all.                                I hope more people post their pretty olive egg photos here.  I'll add mine next week!
 Would be Nice to know who lays what.  But really impossible unless i hung around the nest boxes for a couple days and recorded hens/eggs as they went in and out of the nestboxes.                                                              The little pullet in my current avatar was about 3 months old in the pic.  She is a silver partridge Easter Egger. She is an exceptionally sweet and friendly pullet, & i thought the avatar pic somewhat captured her personality.  I change my avatar fairly often tho, gotta give others their "15 minutes of fame."                             I know its a bit off topic from olive egg colors, but wanted to say, my roosters dont fight with each other either.  Yes, lots of space AND keeping only roosters with great temperments for breeding are the keys. I started dividing flocks by age so i can use hatching eggs from younger hens to keep broody hatch rates near 100%. (I dont cull older hens; they have earned their retirement benefits.)  Before i started keeping separate flocks, had one giant flock of approx. 200 hens and 17 roosters.  Roos would ocassionally  posture and threaten each other, til one made his retreat and peace was restored.  They never actually never drew blood at all.                                I hope more people post their pretty olive egg photos here.  I'll add mine next week! 
 
		 
 
		 
 
 
			 
			 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		