Well being he only breeds her when she leaves the safety of the mature Rooster and then stands on her he is challenging the Rooster. He takes what he can get. Once fully mature he may calm down or things could go sideways really fast.
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The plan is to cull him and replace him with the BCM. I've been delaying his culling in the hope that he is keeping the cockerel in check while he is maturing, so he doesn't make a complete adolescent pest of himself to the hens. The old cock has lost a step and has limited interest and great difficult catching the girls to mate, so the hens (Gimpy aside) are not being over-mated.Having 2 males in residence may be exacerbating the younger cocks aggression.
What are you plans for the older cockbird?
Well being he only breeds her when she leaves the safety of the mature Rooster and then stands on her he is challenging the Rooster. He takes what he can get. Once fully mature he may calm down or things could go sideways really fast.
Well if it was a possibility you could House Duke and Gimpy in a separate Coop and Run together and try that?The plan is to cull him and replace him with the BCM. I've been delaying his culling in the hope that he is keeping the cockerel in check while he is maturing, so he doesn't make a complete adolescent pest of himself to the hens. The old cock has lost a step and has limited interest and great difficult catching the girls to mate, so the hens (Gimpy aside) are not being over-mated.
I'm starting to see some other signs that the cockerel is thinking about challenging the Duke. I probably need to bite the bullet, cull Duke and then see if the BCM behavior is acceptable once he is the only rooster in the game. If he isn't, it looks like I'll be buying hatching eggs again and trying again next year.
The hard part is putting my emotions to the side. Part of me wants to keep Duke one more year, even though he really isn't up the task anymore, just because it's hard not to get attached over the years.
That's an interesting idea -- would he have to be out of sight from the other chickens?I'd at least isolate the older cock for a time to see how they younger ones behaves.
I've seen immediate changes when doing so.
There aren't many reasons I would kill and eat one of the roosters here for behavior problems but this might be one of them.I have an 8 month old BCM rooster. Recently, I've observed a couple of behaviors that make me wonder if he's a keeper.
First, he is laser-locked on one hen, a small EE "Gimpy" who was born with a twisted foot. He occasionally dances and courts some of other hens, but he just runs Gimpy down every chance he gets. She usually hangs out with my older rooster, Duke, and when she's with him, he leaves her alone, but as soon as she separates, he's on her. I have 12 hens, and he focuses 90% of his attentions on her. I assume its because she is easy to catch, but was hoping he would start spreading his attentions out more evenly.
Worse, when he does mate her, it's not a quick on and off. Because he's young, he's a little awkward, so there's a lot of shifting and flapping. I get that, but after he's finished, he remains standing on her, looking around, like she's a perch. I don't know how long he remains, because if I see him standing there, I walk over and shoo him off, but it's been at least 30 to 60 seconds that I've observed before I'm able to shoo him off. Is this normal for young roosters and something he is likely to outgrow?
I'm worried he is going to injure her with all his attentions and prolonged standing. She's losing feathers on her back and has stopped laying, presumably because of the stress. She is my husband's favorite chicken, and he is ready with the axe. My plan was a to replace old Duke with the BCM, but I'm second guessing that now.
Gah! I hate to have to start my replacement rooster search all over this year.