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Thank you Shad and all for helping me with the rooster situation. Big Red is no longer here, which I have needed some time to process.
Along with him, the serama cockerel went to live on an acquaintances farm, where he’ll get to free range. It wouldn’t be a fluffycrow decision if there wasn’t a mistake, ish. Along with Big Red, also went Elrond. To no fault of his own, he was just too big for all but one of the girls here (his mother). That left the pure Tsouloufati rooster, an incredibly respectful, and much smaller rooster. Well, Tuesday morning, he was showing the same symptoms as his father. Couldn’t stand, half the comb purple, very weak. By mid day, he had passed. I’m pretty sure it was heart related, as he had similar symptoms (though not as extreme) once before.
That means that we no longer have roosters here, for the first time in over five years. On the bright side, the hens are feeling much safer. Some have already started growing back feathers. Today I saw one bathing; I have not seen that in months, they refused to sun bathe out of feet of being mated. Not the outcome I had hoped for, but an outcome that has left the hens much more relaxed than before

It's all hard decisions. I've yet to find a way of avoiding them and that, though it may not seem so in many circumstances, is probably good for the keeper and usually good for the chickens.
For some of us, we inadvertently become part of the group. Many and I include myself, get more attached to one particular individual than another.
None of it is straightforward in my experience.
You may recall I had to kill Dig, son of Henry because of how he treated the hens. Dragging hens off nests and then trying to force them to mate just isn't acceptable in my view; it doesn't matter how nice he is to me and given the size difference and the tolerance of Henry and his hens to my behavior, I would call a cockerel who behaved like that a kind of coward; don't piss of the big chicken. At least with a cockerel that tries to flog you when he thinks he's protecting the hens, mostly, and who shows some respect towards the hens and his father where applicable is likely to prove popular with the hens and intelligent enough to come to some arrangement in time. It's great when one gets both, keeper friendly and liked and wanted by the hens. I can think of lots of instances where the hens adored their rooster, sometimes I just couldn't see the attraction, other times such as Harold and Bluespot I could see exactly why there were such a good couple and Harold was well respected by all, his tribe or not.
If Dig had worked out I wouldn't be in the current situation of having to find and introduce a new male with all the risks that entails. I had tried to plan for Henry's death hoping for a son to take over. That all went badly wrong and I've been doing this chicken thing for over twenty years.

I would like to offer a caution; do not let yourself become the groups rooster!
It's easily done with a group that has had males in it. The hens will look to the keeper for all those things they expected from the rooster. You can't do it, none of it really.