- Apr 26, 2008
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- 26
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Hi,
We got a new rooster a month ago, I quarantined him, and just let him out with the hens yesterday. During this month they have roamed where he is able to see them, but I had a double fence around his coop so they were not in close proximity. However he was able to observe them. I have 7 hens: five who were raised together and two who I added a couple of months ago. The dominant hen has never liked these two (barred rocks) and they are at the bottom of the pecking order. (Maybe it's because I didn't quarantine them well/long enough and they were mixed in together before seeing each other for several weeks?)
Anyway, when I let the rooster out yesterday, he too has started attacking these barred rocks. He chases them away from the food and today I saw him actually running them down and pecking them. I quickly shut them up with the other hens and left him alone and lonely outside their coop. The other hens have never done this with them, they just snip at them once in a while if they get too close (and with my hens, they do seem to rotate pecking order except for the top hen, so they have shared the scorn with two other of the old-timers and are not physically harmful to the barred rocks, so I was just letting them be).
Could the rooster have picked up on this pecking order from watching the hens?
The former owner has agreed to take him back, but I wondered if there was anything else I should do? I tried keeping all of the other five hens up today and only having the two barred rocks out with him, thinking he might warm up to them, but that was not successful.
Should I look at rehoming dominant hen too? Frankly I like the barred rocks the best and feel protective of them, I would rather not give THEM away as long as the probable hen behavior is that they will move on to someone else soon. I just want to be sure that just sending the rooster away is the right approach. I have toyed with the idea of keeping him and giving the two barred rocks away (despite my affinity for them, to protect them), but if he's selectively mean to two now, what's to say he won't do this with other new additions?
I was hoping to move to a closed flock, so I am bummed about him not working out.
Thanks for any insight,
Shannon
We got a new rooster a month ago, I quarantined him, and just let him out with the hens yesterday. During this month they have roamed where he is able to see them, but I had a double fence around his coop so they were not in close proximity. However he was able to observe them. I have 7 hens: five who were raised together and two who I added a couple of months ago. The dominant hen has never liked these two (barred rocks) and they are at the bottom of the pecking order. (Maybe it's because I didn't quarantine them well/long enough and they were mixed in together before seeing each other for several weeks?)
Anyway, when I let the rooster out yesterday, he too has started attacking these barred rocks. He chases them away from the food and today I saw him actually running them down and pecking them. I quickly shut them up with the other hens and left him alone and lonely outside their coop. The other hens have never done this with them, they just snip at them once in a while if they get too close (and with my hens, they do seem to rotate pecking order except for the top hen, so they have shared the scorn with two other of the old-timers and are not physically harmful to the barred rocks, so I was just letting them be).
Could the rooster have picked up on this pecking order from watching the hens?
The former owner has agreed to take him back, but I wondered if there was anything else I should do? I tried keeping all of the other five hens up today and only having the two barred rocks out with him, thinking he might warm up to them, but that was not successful.
Should I look at rehoming dominant hen too? Frankly I like the barred rocks the best and feel protective of them, I would rather not give THEM away as long as the probable hen behavior is that they will move on to someone else soon. I just want to be sure that just sending the rooster away is the right approach. I have toyed with the idea of keeping him and giving the two barred rocks away (despite my affinity for them, to protect them), but if he's selectively mean to two now, what's to say he won't do this with other new additions?
I was hoping to move to a closed flock, so I am bummed about him not working out.
Thanks for any insight,
Shannon