Sadly....
I agree with you completely!!!
So, the definite male and female, as well as the iffy ones!!

I agree with you completely!!!
So, the definite male and female, as well as the iffy ones!!
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Is he able to eat enough? Or is someone chasing him away from the food?My three little gold spangled pullets are doing very well. They are happy, healthy, and active.
The little cockerel, on the other hand, is droopy, thin, sluggish, his comb and wattles are pale, and he's gaunt. When I pick him up, he feels like he's starving, his keel sticks out and, unless he just ate, his crop is not there.
I've never seen this. What's wrong with him?
I feel so badly =(
At first, I thought he was getting chased away from the feeder, so every day I separated and fed him. He gets 2+ duck eggs daily and corn and unlimited crumbles. He loves the eggs. His group has been out with the big chickens during the day for about a week. He might look slightly better, but still very thinIs he able to eat enough? Or is someone chasing him away from the food?
One way to check whether he's being chased away from the food: if there is anything your chickens love to eat, put some out and watch whether he gets his share or whether he stays back. I like to use wet chicken feed to test things like that. It's just chicken feed plus water, but the chickens seem to love it. Because they cannot pick up pieces and run around, they clearly show which ones are dominant (eating freely), which ones can sneak a bite, and which ones are too scared to come close.
If he is not able to eat freely in the pen with the others, you might need to put him in a cage by himself for a while. If his only problem is starvation caused by bullying, he should improve pretty quickly when he has plenty to eat and drink and no competition. But if he has other problems, he may not improve, and you will need to figure out what else is going on.
Do you separate and feed him only once a day? Or twice?At first, I thought he was getting chased away from the feeder, so every day I separated and fed him. He gets 2+ duck eggs daily and corn and unlimited crumbles. He loves the eggs. His group has been out with the big chickens during the day for about a week. He might look slightly better, but still very thin
He's been getting two private meals a day. At night he is in the chick hutch (in the big chicken coop, but separated) with a pair of polish bantams, an OEGB cockerel, and the three spitz pullets. During the day he and his group get to free-range with the other birds.Do you separate and feed him only once a day? Or twice?
If you don't have the time to separate him out 3 times a day to feed him... I would put him into his own cage fir a week, so he has full constant access to feed, without being bullied.
If the pullets are good to him, and it is only the older birds/established flock that is the issue... then I would put all 4 young Spitz into their own area or tractor.
He's been getting two private meals a day. At night he is in the chick hutch (in the big chicken coop, but separated) with a pair of polish bantams, an OEGB cockerel, and the three spitz pullets. During the day he and his group get to free-range with the other birds.
I don't really think he is getting bullied.
I wonder why he's so thin?