Since we live in a remote area and fresh eggs are not to be had any other way, along w/the price of shipping cases of frozen chicken too costly, I'm thoroughly enjoying my hens and don't want a rooster tearing them up at all.
Those hens were so happy to have me back home after gone a week since I normally clean their bedding and nests each Saturday, the day I got back home (surgery for one of my dogs) I cleaned the coop and got 11 eggs from 8 hens! They normally top off at 9, regularly.
My reason for a roo is to have fertilized eggs for an incubator when and/or if each Spring I need to replenish my own flock or for 4 different friends to keep up a flock. I won't need much in additions very often as my coop is clean and heated, along w/free feeding w/treats and those hens are also "pets."
The man I got mine from doesn't have too many now, he inherited a mean roo from one of my neighbors along w/his experimenting w/feed and price cutting so he's down to a few. He found scratch cost only half what a bag of feed costs w/shipping and handling. While his coop is heated and lights, too, feed is very important along w/I'd never keep a roo that tore up and killed my hens. He also tells me they aren't meant to be pets, but mine are, for and to me.
The neighbor who gave him the mean roo, she is building a bigger coop and only had two hens w/the roo but they weren't laying, she didn't have enough light for them all winter, along w/too small nesting boxes and never cleaning the coop.
Another friend is down to one old RIR hen and 2 Americana's so I gave her two of my 10 pullets but they don't have enough light for decent laying unless its summer and then I don't remember her allowing the hens to be outside the shed that also houses two sheep.
After writing this, I'm wondering why I'm thinking of how to help them enjoy and be better care takers of chickens...to get better results?
In fact, the one neighbor who really enjoys my hens wants to get a flock sometime in May- she & her dh want to use an insulated building they own, with windows. He's going to run base board heat in, and I should be calling tomorrow a.m., to change my order to all pullet chicks as they want, that I can keep in the house until they are put into the neighbor's building!
She wants my flock inside w/hers, too, but I've warned them about the young ones not being safe w/older ones so they want to put chicken wire up, to separate but house together. She just won a fight over cancer so has to be careful with dust, etc., so she helps w/my flock a bit but I think I'd be doing more cleaning their coop for her health.
I've got more yard space and chain link fence for their enjoyment to free range protected, summers. Its nice to enjoy the hens, eggs, and spinning wool together. Plus, they've owned geese in the past so can give me pointers but never bred theirs to hatch eggs.
I must have Spring Fever and be totally addicted. Yep...since I've ordered a large bag of starter, I'd better change the order to pullets! Our winters are six months long and summers only three at most so they are in the coop most of the year.
And I'd really like to keep my flock near me, those hens are going to look so pretty out in the yard all summer...think I'll stick w/the original plan.