Please don't apologize. I appreciate the advice and I appreciate it more than once to refresh my mind and also to get me thinking!
So many people talk about not being able to keep more than one rooster. I don't have a problem. I don't confine my birds so all bottom roosters can get away when necessary. Even putting up a divider wall in the coop could allow a rooster to get away as well as places for them to duck under.
Mine occasionally fight, mostly bantams, I let them do it until they are done. No one has been killed, probably because the loser can slink off somewhere.
I yearly pull young roosters out of my separate bantam coop and I integrate them into the large breed flock. It does take time. Everyone wants integration to be over in days, I expect months on older bird, especially roosters since there are plenty of roosters already in that flock.
Usually when I release them they already know their position in the flock and there's no fighting, he just get chased a bit as a reminder. If it doesn't go well the first time I try again. They can go in and out of the pen multiple times before it all works out. I have never had it not work out.
The only situation I'm unsure of is just 2 roosters, which unless raised together may focus only on each other, but even in that situation I might swap roosters weekly for months until the dead of winter when I would try to get both together again.
I spend a lot of time managing my roosters during their first year or two if necessary. Not every rooster needs it, but those that do turn out well.
I just don't want to be that crazy lady who keeps repeating the same thing, so let me know if I do. To me roosters are like puppies, most people think a puppy should behave by 6-12 months, but most require 2 years before I consider them raised, same with roosters, both need management during adolescence to adulthood, than they are wonderful assets to a flock.
Done rambling now.