- Thread starter
- #81
LaurenRitz
Crowing
Something occurred to me that I hadn't considered before.
Taking into account, first, that the family I got the rooster from said there was no human aggression when they had him. Plenty of rooster aggression, which is why they wanted to get rid of him.
Like many here, they have a 0 tolerance policy for rooster aggression.
This suggests that something about being at my house triggered this.
I guessed that part of it was my own behavior, which I have worked to modify, with some success.
2nd, I had no time to get ready for him. I knew he was coming, eventually, but then it was "He's fighting too much with the other roosters, we're on our way."
Since I didn't have the isolation box ready, he was in a small cage. He did have food and water, but I could swear he tipped them over on purpose, growling at me all the time.
I don't think he ate or drank during that time. I was going to leave him in the cage for a week, but I didn't want him dying and the girls were doing fine having him around, so I let him out after about a day and a half.
So he started his experience here with hunger, thirst, anger and fear, things he had probably never experienced. And most likely from his perspective, I was doing this to him.
Humans are the bringer of food, after all.
Third, shortly before I got him I had reduced the amount of food because the girls were leaving a lot, and I didn't think to increase it when I got the rooster.
I think that first attack, as @centrarchid suggested, was feed bucket aggression. He was hungry, and as the bringer of food I was responsible. It is notable that there were no spurs involved in that first attack. Bruises, yes.
By responding as I did, both by hitting back and by my reactions after the fact, I reinforced the behavior.
Taking into account, first, that the family I got the rooster from said there was no human aggression when they had him. Plenty of rooster aggression, which is why they wanted to get rid of him.
Like many here, they have a 0 tolerance policy for rooster aggression.
This suggests that something about being at my house triggered this.
I guessed that part of it was my own behavior, which I have worked to modify, with some success.
2nd, I had no time to get ready for him. I knew he was coming, eventually, but then it was "He's fighting too much with the other roosters, we're on our way."
Since I didn't have the isolation box ready, he was in a small cage. He did have food and water, but I could swear he tipped them over on purpose, growling at me all the time.
I don't think he ate or drank during that time. I was going to leave him in the cage for a week, but I didn't want him dying and the girls were doing fine having him around, so I let him out after about a day and a half.
So he started his experience here with hunger, thirst, anger and fear, things he had probably never experienced. And most likely from his perspective, I was doing this to him.
Humans are the bringer of food, after all.
Third, shortly before I got him I had reduced the amount of food because the girls were leaving a lot, and I didn't think to increase it when I got the rooster.
I think that first attack, as @centrarchid suggested, was feed bucket aggression. He was hungry, and as the bringer of food I was responsible. It is notable that there were no spurs involved in that first attack. Bruises, yes.
By responding as I did, both by hitting back and by my reactions after the fact, I reinforced the behavior.