@Maria Zavey
My advice is to throw the PP in the trash and find better solutions to your flock management problems. My opinion is that PP are cruel. They can cause discomfort or pain, infections, abscesses, and they just aren't addressing the problem at all. You mustn't use them permanently for health reasons, so when you take them off they will likely revert to the same behaviour.
Other possible solutions:
1. lower the bird's status in the flock, which you can do by separating them for a while, feeding treats to others first, generally and obviously favouring the others before her.
2. Create a second flock where you split off the warring factions. This might mean housing them in separate pens day and night, or just during the day and they roost together.
3. remove one of the birds permanently and rehome it, eat it, sell it, cull it, whatever you decide.
Ultimately, you need a happy flock who live together in relative peace and harmony. It will have hierarchy (and sometimes that looks like bullying) but there should not be injuries.
Ensure that there are places to hide, plenty of space for them all, "furniture" in the run for them to jump on and perch, several feed and water stations so nobody gets prevented from eating or drinking, some enrichment activities to keep them busy....
These all reduce stress and ensure safety of lower ranking chickens.
There are many ways of better bully management than PP.
Hope you can get creative!
My advice is to throw the PP in the trash and find better solutions to your flock management problems. My opinion is that PP are cruel. They can cause discomfort or pain, infections, abscesses, and they just aren't addressing the problem at all. You mustn't use them permanently for health reasons, so when you take them off they will likely revert to the same behaviour.
Other possible solutions:
1. lower the bird's status in the flock, which you can do by separating them for a while, feeding treats to others first, generally and obviously favouring the others before her.
2. Create a second flock where you split off the warring factions. This might mean housing them in separate pens day and night, or just during the day and they roost together.
3. remove one of the birds permanently and rehome it, eat it, sell it, cull it, whatever you decide.
Ultimately, you need a happy flock who live together in relative peace and harmony. It will have hierarchy (and sometimes that looks like bullying) but there should not be injuries.
Ensure that there are places to hide, plenty of space for them all, "furniture" in the run for them to jump on and perch, several feed and water stations so nobody gets prevented from eating or drinking, some enrichment activities to keep them busy....
These all reduce stress and ensure safety of lower ranking chickens.
There are many ways of better bully management than PP.
Hope you can get creative!