I have a question about EEs. I just bought 4 2yr old EE hens. They are all being pecked on and chased. They seem to be at the bottom of the pecking order. I found one EE hen pinned in the cross fence when they were free ranging and her back feathers plucked. I feel so bad for all four of them,
You will always have the low chicken at the bottom of the pecking order, however I would not tolerate excessive bullying, like plucking a chicken bare. I would either remove the instigator for a week or so then reintroduce her, or remove the lowest and see if they then attack the next lowest. If the next lowest then got attacked in the same way I would definately permenanty remove the bully(s) but if the second lowest wasn't picked on as hard I would assume the chicken that was getting picked on hard was the problem and remove her permenantly from the flock.
very good advice from both of you. I second the extra feed and especially water dishes. At least until the order is better, another trick i use when doing new intros is to let out the birds in groups from the highest pecking order first, wait a bit, then a lower group...... This gives the bullyies a chance to run off a bit of steam, and the others to eat a bite un-harrassed before heading out.x 2![]()
I'm pretty pleased with the way my flock treats one another. of course there is an order, but there is some flexibility within the ranks... one can peck another for roost space and get pecked back over the feed dish... my gang doesn't need to peck at each other much, there is plenty of space, lots of roosts and 3 feeding/watering stations.
Then let in in order of lowest to highest, again so that the underlings get a chance to eat. ABOVE ALL FEEL THE CROPS AT NIGHFALL! This is the most important step, may save a life. They need to have full crops, that will be the most sure way to know how bad the bullying is as the bullies won't be wanting to share food.