I LOVE roosters and I wouldn't be without them!
The trick is for you to be the "top rooster" in the flock. When my roos were babies I didn't coddle them, so they grew up being a little afraid of me, which is good! They do not challenge me. Right now I have an EE roo and 2 banty roos.
The banty roos can't mate my standard-size girls - they just don't fit together, as much as he tries. So I wouldn't count on a tiny roo to give you fertile eggs.
My roosters are very gentle with my girls - no one has any missing feathers at all and none of the girls are afraid of them. I have 20 hens and 3 roos in a really big coop/run. Whenever I give treats, the boys let the girls eat their fill and if they manage to get any, they usually turn around and give it to one of the girls. They always think of the girls first.
They keep the peace in the coop. My top hen used to be quite mean to the younger hens and I had to seperate them for a while. Once I added a roo, there was perfect harmony. If 2 of the girls get in a skirmish, the roo breaks it up immediately. He gets in between them and the girls back down.
One of my friends' roosters was killed by a dog. Her 7 hens and roo were free-ranging in her fenced-in yard when the dog hopped the fence and ran for the chickens. The hens ran away, but the roo ran towards the dog to protect the girls and he was killed. It happened in front of her son and he asked why the rooster didn't run away, too, because then he wouldn't be dead. She had to explain that's just what they do - they're willing to sacrifice themselves to save the hens.
I think a rooster can be a very valuable addition to a flock - I really love ours.
The trick is for you to be the "top rooster" in the flock. When my roos were babies I didn't coddle them, so they grew up being a little afraid of me, which is good! They do not challenge me. Right now I have an EE roo and 2 banty roos.
The banty roos can't mate my standard-size girls - they just don't fit together, as much as he tries. So I wouldn't count on a tiny roo to give you fertile eggs.
My roosters are very gentle with my girls - no one has any missing feathers at all and none of the girls are afraid of them. I have 20 hens and 3 roos in a really big coop/run. Whenever I give treats, the boys let the girls eat their fill and if they manage to get any, they usually turn around and give it to one of the girls. They always think of the girls first.
They keep the peace in the coop. My top hen used to be quite mean to the younger hens and I had to seperate them for a while. Once I added a roo, there was perfect harmony. If 2 of the girls get in a skirmish, the roo breaks it up immediately. He gets in between them and the girls back down.
One of my friends' roosters was killed by a dog. Her 7 hens and roo were free-ranging in her fenced-in yard when the dog hopped the fence and ran for the chickens. The hens ran away, but the roo ran towards the dog to protect the girls and he was killed. It happened in front of her son and he asked why the rooster didn't run away, too, because then he wouldn't be dead. She had to explain that's just what they do - they're willing to sacrifice themselves to save the hens.
I think a rooster can be a very valuable addition to a flock - I really love ours.