Rooster is exotic animal, hen is not?

Thanks, but I have 6 hens right now and should only have 4. I am planning on getting more and have a few a** hole neighbors, so don't want to call attention to myself at this time.
 
Thanks, but I have 6 hens right now and should only have 4. I am planning on getting more and have a few a** hole neighbors, so don't want to call attention to myself at this time.
Oh,my mama should have four children too. But she has five. She got lucky, her neighbors are nice. one of neighbors said she loved to hear us screaming.
be more careful, when you don't have nice neighbors.
 
Too many new people in this old neighborhood after Katrina. There are less people like us, who have been here for generations (3 generations for us). Some want the neighborhood to change, but we have always had farm animals in this neighborhood (and through out the city proper). When I was a teenager we had a horse who lived in a vacant lot! So those of us who have lived here forever are fighting to keep our neighborhood as it always was, cottages with people who take care of each other. Hopefully we wont end up out numbered. Thanks for asking.
 
Hi and glad you joined us at BYC :frow You have a supporter in despising dumb laws... When I lived in VA, my county had a permit requirement to have hens ($450) and a ton of restrictions--yet my neighbor who live two blocks away and in a different county had a full flock in his back yard and totally legal. Guess I was just too close to DC. Now I live in the country and keep pretty much anything:woot
 
Don't know your city, but maybe you could tell the city council that your rooster identifies as a hen, and then ask them if they are transphobic.
 
Just to be clear, we have lived in our neighborhood for 3 generations. Our family is one of the first families here in New Orleans. So the family has lived in the city for almost 300 years. It really is sad to see some of the changes and neglect in the last twelve years. But we are New Orleaneans and aren't going anywhere. We intend to fight for our city. Many people have moved to a next door suburb, very close to the city, but in another parish (county). Not to get political, however I can't live where a few years back David Duke was elected to the state legislature. Just my family's opinion.
 
Too many new people in this old neighborhood after Katrina. There are less people like us, who have been here for generations (3 generations for us). Some want the neighborhood to change, but we have always had farm animals in this neighborhood (and through out the city proper). When I was a teenager we had a horse who lived in a vacant lot! So those of us who have lived here forever are fighting to keep our neighborhood as it always was, cottages with people who take care of each other. Hopefully we wont end up out numbered. Thanks for asking.
It's so sad. Sometime, the world is changing in a bad way. what a beautiful life in the past.
 
Better yet ask them why they are against diversity (exotic) and chickens of color (roosters typically being more colorful)

Realistically, though, you might try the historical angle, kind of like some animal is a historical feature of Key West.
Very interesting post, as the city has always prided itself on it's diversity. And we are very diverse, that's one of the reasons we have continued to stay. Strong history of diversity for 300 years. And now it seems to be changing. Just sad.
 

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