one of my roos died





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I'm sorry. It's always hard to lose them.one of my roos died![]()
his bro misses himI'm sorry. It's always hard to lose them.![]()
I’m sorry.his bro misses him
I prefer males in a male only group several as disperses aggression in American Domniques.I’ve read on some other articles (not on byc) that roos do a lot better in bachelor flocks of three rather than two. Because then it evens out the pecking order. Has anyone noticed that? I used to have a couple of flocks of two roos and they seemed to work out well but mostly I had bigger flocks.
I believe it! I had to break up my trio after selling one.I’ve read on some other articles (not on byc) that roos do a lot better in bachelor flocks of three rather than two. Because then it evens out the pecking order. Has anyone noticed that? I used to have a couple of flocks of two roos and they seemed to work out well but mostly I had bigger flocks.
There’s a lot of informational posts in those threads. Do you have any tips about bachelor flocks you’d like to share?I prefer males in a male only group several as disperses aggression in American Domniques.
https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...-manage-numerous-flocks.759717/#post-10812479
https://www.backyardchickens.com/th...in-american-dominiques.1019004/#post-15802005
I’m sorry you had to deal with that.I believe it! I had to break up my trio after selling one.
I had three cockerels in together, who have been in together since last fall. The first two were born in the same hatch - raised together and never been apart. I added a slightly older male to them in November. The older one became the top cockerel. I sold him a few weeks ago, and that same evening my other two cockerels started fighting. I figured they were resetting the pecking order, but it got really rough and blood was drawn. I separated them for the evening, and let them out together the next morning. This fight went beyond establishing a new pecking order - they were actually cock fighting. By the time I broke it up, both were falling over from exhaustion but still trying to kill each other. One was covered in blood and missing an earlobe, the other one's eye was swollen shut and he was missing half his tufts. I separated them for good that day.
So how do just two cockerels settle a pecking order dispute?? I guess they don't; at least that has been my experience.