I noticed in the photos of your pens that you do not have any seperation between them. Do you have any conflict between the birds in the adjoining pens. I use a 24" seperation between my adjoining pens but juding from your photos this may not be necessary. Thanks
I would not be able to afford seperating the pens, that would be alot more panels. Although thinking about it- 24 inches between each pen would be a good way to let plants grow for natural shade, windbreak, etc.
We have not had a problem with conflict between our continous pens. I do not use sight barrier either. My belief is that- sight barrier makes a pen even smaller. Instead of the birds seeing out around them, the slight barrier closes in their world. A little planning and smarts avoids conflict rather than restrict their world more. I see posts like this
run 1 male to 4 or 5 hens so 1 hen is not being beating on
I think by not having sight barrier the male's have other interactions to take up some time instead of just focusing on the hen(s) in their pen. Yes I have had males beat up hens, but rarely. Those males that are overly aggressive are removed from my breeding program. I have had just as good of fertility from males that are more personable.
A little planning and smarts- I usually place pheasants from different falimies next to each other, like a gallo pheasant pen, then a longtailed pheasant in the next pen, then maybe a ruffed pheasant pen next, then back to a gallo pheasant pen. But I have had same pheasants next to each other without incident. Our Ringneck breeder pens are all side by side, biggest problem there is, since it's 2x4 mesh, making sure they do not roll eggs into the next pen. But nest boxes solve that.
I am not recommending anyone do it that way, this is only what works for me, results may vary.