kattabelly
Crowing
It can do.Really?? I thought that meant killing them.![]()
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It can do.Really?? I thought that meant killing them.![]()
Good, solid husbandry advice.I never had this happen until a coupe of years ago. This is what happened. I had a Roo that became heartless to this one hen. She was older, and I had decided to cull her in the fall. But in the meantime a predator got the rooster. She immediately did fine in the flock.
But the following summer, the new rooster started the same thing on the same hen. I did cull her, and peace was back in the flock.
So I donāt think your flock dynamics will go back. I think you need to remove one of them. Do you want to keep an old , non productive bird or the rooster.
You might pull out the victim and see how the flock interacts. If he picks a new victim, cull him. If the flock is calm and peaceful, cull her.
The thing is, this strife upsets the rest of the hens too.
Mrs K
If I'm separating a rooster or cockerel longer-term, I use a big dog kennel within my main chicken run. I've used smaller crates/cages for short medical look-but-don't-touch precautions when dealing with injury or illness, usually also within the main chicken yard.I have a similar situation and would appreciate advice. I read all the responses above, and I will try some of this. Here is the situation. I have 2 older hens (production RIRs) that bullied the chicks that I hatched (heritage RIRs, 11 in the new group, 9 hens, 2 roosters, all grew up together, now 6 months old). So there are 2 roosters and 13 hens. Only the 2 older hens are making eggs (sporadically, starting to sputter). The new group isn't making eggs yet. I would assume any day now.
I know that there is a balance between number of roosters and number of hens. I probably don't have it. But one rooster in particular (named Prince) is mean to multiple hens. Today I found one new group hen (named Iris) with a punctured eyeball. I don't know what her outcome will be, but I asked the medical question in another forum.
When you separate a rooster or hen, do you build them their own coop/run? Is it near the original coop/run? Or completely separate and out of sight?
I have been putting VetRX on the combs and waddles of the injured hens. That has been helping to reduce the pecking attacks. But I find Prince pecking and holding onto the hens combs/waddles, and the hens are screeching. I have used the water hose and chased him with a tree branch to let him know I was not happy about this.
All the hens live in a huge 20 ft x 30 ft enclosed run, 6 ft tall. They free range all day, from about 10 am until 5 pm. Prince attacks the hens inside and outside the coop/run, but not all the hens. Maybe 4 of the 9 new hens?
I will try separating Prince from the flock, once I find out how to separate him.