If you have young children, get rid of him, you are risking too much. And really it is not funny, it is scary as hell. If you leave him, he will probably be attacking you soon enough, and most definitely the children.
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x3 (Maybe your wife will find some amusement in it, though, when he attacks you)If you have young children, get rid of him, you are risking too much. And really it is not funny, it is scary as hell. If you leave him, he will probably be attacking you soon enough, and most definitely the children.
This. If it's gone far enough he's attacked your wife, it's time to go. Personally, I would be so incredibly hurt and disappointed in my husband if any animal that attacked me saw the next sunrise. My husband's job is to protect me, and if not me, then absolutely our children.If you have young children, get rid of him, you are risking too much. And really it is not funny, it is scary as hell. If you leave him, he will probably be attacking you soon enough, and most definitely the children.
Your wife is a patient woman. I would not stop my husband from taking out an aggressive rooster - no matter whether he attacked me or someone else. A rooster is not "doing his job" when he's attacking the humans that feed him and care for his flock. He's "doing his job" when he's protecting them from a predator. I know people will say that he's perceiving you as the predator, but that's not always the case. Not when he knows you and sees you interacting with the flock every single day. He's just plain being aggressive. The last two adult roosters I've had do their job just fine but stay out of my way when I'm out and about with the chickens. They stay out of my way, moving off on their own.Bobbi-j should would find that amusing, and I was going to take him out, but my wife does not want me to. We wanted to see if there was something we could do to stop it rather than getting rid of him; because he was doing his job.
Your wife is a patient woman. I would not stop my husband from taking out an aggressive rooster - no matter whether he attacked me or someone else. A rooster is not "doing his job" when he's attacking the humans that feed him and care for his flock. He's "doing his job" when he's protecting them from a predator. I know people will say that he's perceiving you as the predator, but that's not always the case. Not when he knows you and sees you interacting with the flock every single day. He's just plain being aggressive. The last two adult roosters I've had do their job just fine but stay out of my way when I'm out and about with the chickens. They stay out of my way, moving off on their own.
I do apologize for being cranky in my previous post.