C, I love your posts, and I'm sure your methods work for you, but maybe not for everyone, especially the new folks with children. Mary
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C, I love your posts, and I'm sure your methods work for you, but maybe not for everyone, especially the new folks with children. Mary
I have very small children and was one myself with chickens. My approach would work for a lot more people if simply tried.Too much out of hand rejection without even trying something different yourself.I wasn't --- and still am not --- willing to invest the next few decades of my life to constantly training, retraining, reinforcing training, in every aggressive rooster and all his offspring, and their offspring, and so on down the line, for sufficient generations to eradicate it.The management I found worked to some degree with aggressive chooks, back when I was still trying to 'fix' them, still represented a long-term endeavor I would only commit to if I had a completely different situation with rare and valuable birds, no children to consider, a decent setup enabling such intensive management and rehabilitation (I prefer free range setups not permanent caging) and a whole bunch of other factors... So, in less words, not right for me.I am still learning about chickens and will likely never cease so long as involved with them. You could re-open the door to knowledge as well.So, by all means, please share what you think is the ideal method for handling this.If you can lay out a workplan or rehab plan for this rooster, here is a willing pupil eager to try to save their bird, and you're the only person on this forum I know of who thinks it's feasible to rehabilitate aggressive behavior rather than just isolate it in cages permanently, or beat the chook into conditional respect, or cull against its aggression.
Best wishes and thanks in advance.
@centrarchid a little more information on how he acts... when my BO heard my mom's voice outside before he could even see her at all he started to crow repeatedly (I was in the coop). I picked him up and brought him outside the door so he could see my mom and I asked my mom to come over and say "hi". She won't go in the coop or near him unless I'm holding him. As she got closer he seemed to get a little more fidgety and nervous, he is normally pretty still and calm when being held. My mom rubbed his neck a little and pet him briefly then walked away. He did not try to peck at her or anything like that and just seemed to have a look like "what's going on" lol. I put him back in the coop and he continued to crow for another minute or so. How would you go about this? I'm trying to convince my mom to get more hands on with helping me correct this but she doesn't seem to want to go for it. My intention with bringing him out to my mom is to show him she's not a threat, should I continue doing this or what should I try?