Red Mangrove
Songster
- Jan 25, 2023
- 629
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I believe that human imprinting is a cause of human directed violence. The rooster is raised thinking himself human, or that humans are chickens. I know that in falconry falcons are respectful to humans when not imprinted- but if they're raised from hatch by human hand then they become extremely violent to humans when emotionally disturbedMy worst rooster was a purebred Orpington, good bloodlines, hand raised from an egg, he was carefully gentled, handled from hatching, treated with great kindness, never abused, never improperly challenged by humans or other roosters and he was pure psychopath. I found him attempting to kill my best hen. Barely saved her life. She was docile, sweet and productive. In no way did she challenge the little bastage. He just felt like killing something.
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Raising them right? Naw. Proper handling? Naw. Genetics? Maybe. Luck? Heck yes!
In my experience the only aggressive roosters I've ever encountered were raised by humans. I don't touch or handle my roosters at all, they all live under identical respectful circumstances, but something about human imprinting causes them to assault innocent bystanding humans. Not one broody raised rooster here has put a single scratch on a human and I've had many feral, exotic, game and conventional breeds
Aggression is genetic in origin and human imprinting is the key that allows it to happen