Yeah....I thought so. No matter, she is a sweetie and protects our little Sultan from the bullies in the yard.Ya she looks like gonna be black![]()

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Yeah....I thought so. No matter, she is a sweetie and protects our little Sultan from the bullies in the yard.Ya she looks like gonna be black![]()
Just joined the thread for this same question. I have a black who is very skittish of my full size layers but cannibalistic towards my bantams. I have a duccle mix and a silkie that now have huge bald spots from healing after her attacks. I have her in a crate that we are calling the chicken jail, but I can't do that too much longer.COLOR/TEMPERMANT
Has anyone seen any distinct personality differences between the Orp colors? We are getting our first this month and wondering if the breed is uniformly docile and friendly or if some colors are less so.
One thing I have done is take them out the aggressor and one other that may do ok with them and coop them seperatly for a couple weeks away from main coop and put them back in later week or two they are then generally lower in the pecking order... It's prob dominance because she is getting picked on she has to pick on the next one in line.... But may be better to seperate your small from your big and she will get used to the big ones and flock with them....Just joined the thread for this same question. I have a black who is very skittish of my full size layers but cannibalistic towards my bantams. I have a duccle mix and a silkie that now have huge bald spots from healing after her attacks. I have her in a crate that we are calling the chicken jail, but I can't do that too much longer.
I need advice for how to discourage her attacks. I'm already considering a second coop to split the flock into heavies and lights, but if there is another option, I would love to hear it.
![]()
Zami in the chicken clink.
That is possibly good information - I would love to experiment with that then by using a rowdy red new hampshire rooster and crossing that with say a tame red star type hen to see if the chicks are less aggressive like their mother. A worthy experiment.We were discussing the aggression in another thread and several noted that aggression seemed to pass through the hen. Even when the chicks are hatched and raised by another hen the offspring tends to follow the biological mother's temperament.
[quote name="Kyzmette" url="/t/357588/orpington-thread/190#post_14116617" Worthy indeed! I hope you do it and if you do, post results!
We were discussing the aggression in another thread and several noted that aggression seemed to pass through the hen. Even when the chicks are hatched and raised by another hen the offspring tends to follow the biological mother's temperament.