What are your goals? Why do you want a rooster? Is egg color or size of the bird for butchering important? How about feather color/pattern? Are you planning on hatching chicks?
Goals:
1.Overall goal is to provide educational experience for chicken loving tween in 4-H. So, many breeds right now bc good to become familiar with a variety of breeds and behaviors. Includes handling rooster, and seeing flock dynamics.
2. Eggs and Egg Color: We want a variety of colors in our basket. So far we have blue, green (light and medium colors), brown (light to medium). We want chickens that produce consistently, but not necessarily like a leghorn, so 4-5/week/bird is good. With a Maran rooster, we could possibly get olive eggs...if we hatch out chicks from Maran over Legbar, for example.
3. Protection: Our current rooster is alert, and calls for the girls for treats, and also for protection - tells them to hide, etc.
4. Chicks: Maybe. We aren't there yet to hatch them. Currently are happy buying chicks. But, might try some to get OE type.
5. Eventually: we will settle on a few breeds, most likely. It could be that we have a laying flock of a variety of breeds or non-breeds (like EE) for those colorful eggs. We may create a breeding pen for purebred something or other that we determine we like. But we are not there yet.
6. Spouse wants a more visually colorful rooster. Our BJG is handsome, but all black (except red comb/wattles of course).
Current Male is nearly 16 months old. He has come after the legs of my spouse and I, although once did try to fly up towards me (neck feathers flared) while I was standing on the coop deck and he was standing on the ground, however, that time I was holding the orange snow shovel that he hates (easy to use and toss around the coop bedding). happily, leaves tween alone. Lately I've been holding a garden stake when I go in - it is a piece of rebar with a metal triangle welded to it at the bottom. Rooster has bitten it several times, and does not like to bite rebar, and is learning to leave me alone when I have it in my hand. I've never gone after him with it, nor hit him, I just decided to hold it vertically in front of me when entering the pen, and I've given him the opportunity to decide if he thinks its a threat (as an extension of me)... Which he was doing for quite awhile and would reach out and bite it once or twice each time. I'm hoping to get him to get past all the hormones of teenage hood. Since BJG are slow to mature, I think he has been hitting that difficult stage later than many males. I would like to keep him for a while longer, but not if he keeps treating me like the enemy. I think he could be good to be flock leader while 1-2 of the young males are growing up and hitting puberty. BJG are known to be docile, so I would like to keep him if possible, but his moderate aggression concerns me, and I am hoping it is a teenage, hormonal thing. My tween wants to keep him too, another reason to try to keep him, if possible.
We have a livestock auction in the area, so some of the current straight run chicks will end up there.