So I have a baby Roo living in the house, and it's time to meet Dad.

dcphotos

In the Brooder
10 Years
Aug 5, 2009
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I got an incubator as a birthday gift in December, and on Christmas an egg hatched. The resulting chick was named "Chirpy" and he has grown amazingly fast. He started life in a bird box my wife brought home from her vet clinic(shes a small animal vet), then he went to living in a large bathtub in our master bathroom. He's nice, loves to be held and is a really cute little pullet. But he's getting big now that he's at two months of age and though I wasn't home he even let out a crow the other day.
This is Chirpy at birth:
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This is Chirpy at one month of age:

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I had been photographing him with his egg for size reference, he stomped it during that shoot. That was his last portrait, I'm a photographer and I've been to busy to work at home. But I'll shoot him again on the 25th. In the last month he has more than doubled in size and is fully covered in feathers now.

Anyhow, this is Chirpy's dad, his name is Elmo:

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Elmo, Chirpy's mom who is named Rock, and two other hens(black and Red, not the most creative names eh?) live in our coop, we only have a few chickens as we just eat the eggs.

Anyhow the reason I'm posting this is for the sake of getting advice as to how to introduce our little house chicken to the big yard birds without getting him pecked to death. I know he is going to be getting competition from dear old dad.
 
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Those are beautiful pictures.
Roosters are something I know about because I have 8 of them ( long story....)
At Chirpy's young age he might be OK to introduce to dad because he does not pose a threat yet. depending on Elmo's personality he will either ignore the youngster or try to breed him. eventually though, they will have to be kept separate especially if there are hens around to fight over. I would definitely introduce them in an area that you could catch one of them in case it doesn't go well. I have 2 brothers that were best of friends for 2 years and one day during a storm they started fighting and since then they have been kept separate. My oldest rooster free ranges with 3 of his 6 month old sons and if they try to fight among themselves he breaks it up. they are all different..Good Luck
 
WOW!!! Great pics!!! To answer your question...I think it may be waaay too soon to try this...especially b/c he's all alone and without a Mama to protect him. I waited until mine were 8-10 weeks(and that was in warmer weather) to put them outside and then I put them with some little banty hens I had and they made out fine b/c they were almost the same size. This is a tough call:confused:...I would wait until he's older and can defend himself or introduce him gradually...like in a separate cage/coop this way the others can get to know him and not hurt him. After a while of them all being able to see each other(maybe a week of that) then maybe if you have a smaller hen or banty would be ideal you could put her in with him and let them bond. After a while of that(maybe a couple weeks?) then reintroduce both of them back to the flock. The ideal thing would be for the flock and "Chirpy" to very gradually get to know each other. Having one baby is so much more complicated...maybe you could pick up a few chicks his age on craigslist or the feedstore if you don't have a small hen or banty hen around and then do the same process with them...keep them outside with the flock but in a seperate pen for a while and then when you feel they are big enough to defend themselves or run fast enough!...then try intergrating them all together. You'll really have to be on your toes...mature chickens can be really mean and if not kill them they could bully them into a tissy! Sorry for the confusing answer...maybe someone else may have a more simple solution. This is just kinda based on what I had to do with my new chicks. Best of luck! Keri

PS. Just a thought but I've heard of people keeping the chicks in a dog crate or small animal cage within the barn...again until he gets big enough to defend himself...he will submit and run from the grown ups right now b/c he's so small..it's just a matter of how much the will want to hurt him or bully him???
 
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I've never had a rooster so I have no idea about the real question but I've got a question for you. Do you mind sharing what lens/ settings you're shooting on? I've got a 50MM/ 1.4 I love shooting the kids with but the chickens seem to move so fast, I can't get the settings right.
 
Yeah that comb is already 3 times bigger than that month-old photo also. I think what I might do is take him outside and let him go in there and hang out for a little while, then I'll take him back in the house. Interesting thing, Chirpy has never seen another chicken before. He loves to be held, none of the others care for it at all.


Do you mind sharing what lens/ settings you're shooting on? I've got a 50MM/ 1.4 I love shooting the kids with but the chickens seem to move so fast, I can't get the settings right.

With the birds it takes patience. I guess I shot Chirpy with a 17-35 zoom lens, there were two lights used, one to the front side and one behind him. The Elmo photo was taken with a 70-200 zoom lens from a few feet away and there was a Nikon flash to camera left, set to TTL with Nikon CLS, camera is a D300.​
 

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