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Rooster spacing, flock division

I will say, that the longer you are in chickens and the more muti-generational your flock becomes, the better roosters you get. I tend to get good roosters when they are raised up under older birds.

So my advice - go ahead and eat these boys if they don't work out. Next spring, look around, ask at the poultry club, the feed store, the county extension agent for some other crazy chicken people. Generally they will have a young rooster that was too nice, and did not get culled. That is the rooster you want, if he is close to a year old, even better.

This rooster has been raised in a true chicken society, he has not been allowed to be a bully, the older birds thumped that out of him. He has learned that he needs to romance the girls, and that he needs to take care of them.

He will be a wonderful addition to your flock, and by then you will have a bit more experience.

Mrs K
 
I find using the search function on BYC doesn't always provide the most accurate links.
No, it doesn't.
Googling is almost better, will still bring you here 8 times out of 10.

Using the advanced search can help,
but still gotta play with the syntax and other setting.
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I do maintain multiple free-ranging flocks over what is currently about 4 acres. Usually about six acres involved, but this year reduced production of young allowed leaving remainder unused by chickens. As of now three discrete flocks although 6 flocks fairly easy. I routinely manage plant community as found cover patches and forage patches can increase odds birds will more effectively use landscape with less discord. Impacts of those patches makes hard and fast rules difficult to come up with for me. The chickens I have appear capable of three social arrangements when comes to roosters. Sex ratio of all three can approach 1:1.

The first arrangement has several roosters and usually a larger number of hens having more or less overlapping home ranges where the entire group moves about together as a loose social unit. This arrangement seems to work when group size is larger and there is very little structure in the plant community (few cover patches). Roosters have a linear hierarchy and compete with each other over mating rights. Some of the competition involves who can mate the hens the most and can be hard on the hens. Roosters provide alarm calls but do not do a much for hens beyond occasional tid-biting that is more often than not a prelude to mating.

The second arrangement is with smaller numbers of birds on a more complex landscape. Social groupings form where a dominant rooster and sometimes satellite(s) (males that are adult and associate with group, but of lower status and usually operate as periphery of a given social group). Satellites mate with hens, but not as often. With this you can have social groups with overlapping home ranges, but two or more groups generally do not occur in same location at same time. Exception to this can be when feeding in a single area that all groups converge on. Discord can be expected with such interactions. Roosting in this arrangement can have have roosters and their respective families / harems / tribes sometimes within a few feet of each other, but usually no overlap on roost. Roosters invest more in hens and forming associations that persist through the day. Hens going broody stop interacting with respective group they are from. Roosters tidbit but very often without mating occurring shortly after. It appears to me that the families need to avoid site of each most of the time, otherwise conflicts will be too frequent and the first arrangement will prevail.

Third arrangement has social groupings where home ranges have little or no overlap. The home ranges are effectively territories where one social group will exclude other social groups. The defense from a distance appears to be mostly rooster actions but hens and even young birds can get involved. I have had 6 week old chicks successfully attack much older juveniles and young adults during confrontations. Satellites can be associated with this arrangement as well. Roosters like in arrangement above and also invest in chicks by helping them find eats and acting in their defense. Broody hens maintain relationship with respective social group and bring chicks into it within a few days of hatch. Integration of young smoothest with this arrangement. This arrangement involves the lowest density of birds and where feeding method does not promote groups coming together too often. When targeting this arrangement I like to load feeders, if they are be fed as all, early in morning before chickens come of the roost.

I assume the OP desires either the second or third type of arrangement. What does seem to work consistently is to have roost sites that are at least 50 yards apart. Again, closer can work, but not as reliably. Each social group then gets multiple cover patches and a well separated feeding station. You can get away with one waterer but it needs to be in a more or less neutral location.

There is a seasonal aspect to this whole mess. Once the heavy molt commences and chicks are no longer dependent on mommy, the social groupings become more fluid. Social groups "solidify" again once breeding season commence which for here is a month or two after winter solstice. It is at that time I have to watch for major battles between roosters that can require my intervention. Once social groupings are worked out, things work pretty good for balance of production season unless a couple satellites get into it over succession when a dominant rooster is drops out for some reason.

Setting up groups is made easier by confining them separately for a time. Watch for discord when they first come together upon release. Do not do this with fighting chickens unless a lot of land involved and you have a back up plan for isolating combatants.
 
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@Shadrach
Thank you for sending the link to your article. Fascinating! I find using the search function on BYC doesn't always provide the most accurate links.
Do you think climate / predator load world alter your research findings? We live at elevation, with wind and sub zero (f) temp. Snow cover pretty much from 12/1-4/1. While I'm hoping to free range, I'm still evaluating letting them range beyond the electric fence.

Particularly appreciate the rooster behavior section. I won't tolerate aggression towards humans - understanding aggression vs flock hierarchy will make me a better judge as I learn more about my chickens. Much appreciated!

While I've never lived in an area like Shadrach's, I imagine the main difference is the cramped quarters they are confined to 24/7 for much of the year. (By cramped, I mean "less than an acre.") I find that the cold dampens their fighting urges by a lot, but if it's snowy and not cold wars do occasionally break out, mostly between cockerels. To avoid this, I try and give them multilevel roosts and blockades they can hide behind (with two escape routes.)
I keep my birds in a totally different situation, so it's hard to say if this or some other factor (breed of bird, weather) causes the differences I've seen between Shad's flock and my own.
 
Interesting question and great responses led me to some questions about my own groups. I have straight run chicks that are 4 weeks old and I have a small group of 2 week old straight run chicks. Based on what I have read here, it would be best to have an older roo to show the cockerels the ropes. My question is, would getting an older roo and putting him with the older flock be wise or a recipe for disaster? (Hope I didn't hijack the thread as it was related to the OPs initial inquiry.)
 
slippednfell - I would not rush this. To me, this takes experience, that you really can't get from reading. Experience with chicks does not equal experience with either cockerels or roosters. (I am assuming that you are just starting out, and only have the chicks).

My advice is to work into this, say over 5 years. A hen only flock the first year, or a flock of pullets and a flock of cockerels that are separate. Harvest the cockerels. Raise up straight run chicks the following year, in the established hen flock. Pulling cockerels that don't fit in the flock to the rooster quarters. Eventually getting a good rooster - it will take a year or more to become a flock master, now you have experience, and they have a true chicken society of multi-generations.

At this point, your older rooster is going to have an effect on your younger roosters. And at this point there will be some natural separation of the flock, and at this point you could really move into the situations of Shadrach and Centrachid.

It does take time, experience and space. And there will be a lot of roosters that will not fit into this long term plan.

Mrs K
 
slippednfell - I would not rush this. To me, this takes experience, that you really can't get from reading. Experience with chicks does not equal experience with either cockerels or roosters. (I am assuming that you are just starting out, and only have the chicks).

My advice is to work into this, say over 5 years. A hen only flock the first year, or a flock of pullets and a flock of cockerels that are separate. Harvest the cockerels. Raise up straight run chicks the following year, in the established hen flock. Pulling cockerels that don't fit in the flock to the rooster quarters. Eventually getting a good rooster - it will take a year or more to become a flock master, now you have experience, and they have a true chicken society of multi-generations.

At this point, your older rooster is going to have an effect on your younger roosters. And at this point there will be some natural separation of the flock, and at this point you could really move into the situations of Shadrach and Centrachid.

It does take time, experience and space. And there will be a lot of roosters that will not fit into this long term plan.

Mrs K


Thank you very much for your wisdom. I will incorporate this into our plan.
 

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