I have 3 DC... they're kinda mean lol. They are older and have considered culling but they still lay pretty regularly at 3+ years old.... except for now that nobody is laying :/
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Those are some nice looking birds! I don't know much about Dark Cornish - are they considered a meat bird only?Just recently got back from picking up my new Dark Cornish - 4 hens and one very happy roo who has never had his own harem until now - LOL! One hen is SQ and all the others are hatchery birds.
I would crawl in ( I have a run like that... I know what it is like) and grab him off the roost. Have gloves and eye protection on. Bring him to where you can inspect the cut. Yes it should and probably has already clotted itself. I have had dumb young roosters fight though the fence and have similar injury's. If he were my bird and the would is clotted and looks clean I would either just put some Nustock or bluecoat on it and put him back for the night. If it hasn't clotted yet you will need to obviously stop the bleeding. Then once again put him backOk I need to tell you all about my rooster and ask what I can do to help him.
He is Plymouth Barred Rock. He is 8 months old now and has a harem of 5 hens. He recently became aggressive towards humans, although we have no physical contact with them. Our run is covered, but only about 4' tall with a narrow opening to crawl in if we absolutely need to. In the spring we're getting a 10x10x6 dog kennel.
My oldest daughter ran in to tell me that he is bleeding. Looks like he injured his comb where it attatches to the back of the head. The hens are leaving him alone. I wonder if the cut will clot on itself. They're all in now for the night. The hens let us touch them, but he wants NOTHING to do with us. Is there anything I can do for him??
You know how I feel about cornish..one of my favorite birds..The foundation to my whole entire laying flock.LM - Dark Cornish are primarily meat birds, but they are fairly decent egg layers. Nothing like a RIR, but not as prone to broodiness as other breeds. As of tonight, the 4 hatchery birds are on the roost, and the tanker-truck of a hen is nested in the hay inside a dog crate... I guess she was just too darn big to get up on the roost, so I may have to modify the roost setup tomorrow to give her an intermediate step. LOL - Big Bertha would be a fitting name... if I really wanted to name my meat birds. Of course this bunch will mainly be kept so I can hatch their eggs. The rooster is already going by "Brewster" among the kids.
Mumsy - I love your setup! You and Delisha both have really neat coops and pens! Looks like your hoop coop is coming right along. I'm sure it will be far more balanced than ours - LOL. Check Craig's List for old windows - that's how we got ours. I went and grabbed about 8 from the curb before building our first coop. I still have a couple left for future projects... dang chicken math!
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