Some breeds aren't just more flighty or high strung, they're more aggressive, too. It doesn't mean the hens will attack you, but it may mean they'll pick on a more docile chicken. It can be harder to mix breeds with very different temperaments. Sometimes it works out fine and sometimes it doesn't. Sometimes chickens kill each other. Some of that depends on the strain (bloodlines) or the individual bird, too, as well as the conditions they live in.
In general, I think you do better to go with all more docile temperaments or all more flighty/high-strung/assertive/aggressive, whatever you want to call it, temperaments in a flock. I usually go with a mix of the more laid-back heavy breeds. My neighbor goes with a mixed flock of light weight layers.
I forgot to add Henderson's chart. It's a good place to start, if you want information on what different breeds are like.
http://www.ithaca.edu/staff/jhenderson/chooks/chooks.html
In general, I think you do better to go with all more docile temperaments or all more flighty/high-strung/assertive/aggressive, whatever you want to call it, temperaments in a flock. I usually go with a mix of the more laid-back heavy breeds. My neighbor goes with a mixed flock of light weight layers.
I forgot to add Henderson's chart. It's a good place to start, if you want information on what different breeds are like.
http://www.ithaca.edu/staff/jhenderson/chooks/chooks.html
Last edited: