- Sep 9, 2014
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Yes, before your edit, that is gameness, but I think it can be distinguished from aggressiveness. I realize it is a really fine line...
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Yes, before your edit, that is gameness, but I think it can be distinguished from aggressiveness. I realize it is a really fine line...
So like seramas then in a sense? The roosters are known to help rear chicks with the hen. Probably what my MalayXKK boy was trying to do at the time then.Yes, pretty common in American Games when single mated.
As in not rare or unheard of.
All roosters can be aggressive toward other roosters. After all they are protecting their hens, and territory. What people turn them into is debatable. Many are pathetic excuses of male chickens.And onto the subject of aggressive roosters;
On my farm any human aggressive rooster is culled, period. I do try to first break that issue but if it doesn't work no matter how SOP they are they are stew pot members. Why? Roosters, specially large ones can do heavy damage, and on our farm we plan on doing farm tours (like a educational petting zoo) and I can't in sane mind allow any aggressive animals towards people be on this property. It a law suite waiting to happen.
Now rooster VS rooster aggression is judge base on what the breed temperament is supposs to be, IE a serama that lashes again another serama is culled while a AG is not, afterall that is their breed trait
yea, serama though for table top shows can't appearantly they get DQ if they lash at another roosterAll roosters can be aggressive toward other roosters. After all they are protecting their hens, and territory. What people turn them into is debatable. Many are pathetic excuses of male chickens.