ShanasCastle
Songster
- Aug 8, 2018
- 91
- 170
- 107
You can try spritzing their bodies with lemon or orange essential oil. Maybe separation, with the ability to see each other but not able to harass the hens so much? My hubby brought home a rooster that his buddy had, who btw was causing problems in his old coop/flock. I put him in a small coop/run that's attached to the hens for couple of days. My hen wasn't suppose to be old enough to lay yet (17 weeks old) but today she laid her first egg. She was very interested in him so after some AWESOME advice from people here, I put her in with him. It went smoothly but he IS a very zealous rooster. None of the Problems he was causing. He's sweet, affectionate, and a gentleman for a young roo. There's an article that I read here on BYC about dealing with rooster....I will try to find it! It's an older but a GREAT read!!My eight juvenile delinquents are just four months old and are a combination of Wyandottes, a RIR, and a New Hampshire Red. The roo is a Wyandotte and boy, has he ever developed fast! He’s already jumping on my girls, who of course scream like they’re being murdered. He’s so ready and they’re so not that one of my larger girls now has a sprained ankle... Everyone’s on edge and avoiding him, which seems to make him even more determined to hump them to death. Other than separating them or putting him in the crock pot, is there anything I can do to make the transition to “henhood” easier for my girls?