IlluminatedYak
In the Brooder
Hello friends! I'm currently in the middle of a grand war between the Old Flock and the New Flock, and I think I have about hit my wits end, so I have come to humbly ask for assistance!
The Old Flock: Currently 2 Cinnamon Queens, 2 Rhode Island Reds, 2 Easter Eggers.
The Cinnamon Queens are sweet to Humans, pretty nice to their flock mates. The Rhode Island Garlic rules with an iron fist, while the other Rhode Island Ginger is.. low on the pecking order and rude about it. The two easter eggers couldn't care less about anything in the world. They love to snuggle, eat treats, and are very independent. These birds were born in Feb of 2019.
The New Flock: 6 Easter Eggers who were born on October 1st, 2019. Very peaceful, beautiful birds who have been a blast to raise. No problems between any of them.
We have a 64 foot by 25 foot run, and a large shed that we re-purposed into a nice little chicken coop that's snuggly inside with tons of room, roosts, and nesting boxes available. There are 3 feeders and 3 water dishes placed through out the entire run, and they get snacks and attention all day long. We've taken a small corner out of the run and fenced it up so the New Flock can see the Old Flock and get used to each other (as we've read on how to introduce old birds to new birds.)
Here's the problem: It's been about three weeks and I think the temporary set up has had about as much as it can take. We tried introducing the birds to each other and it was.. pretty bad. The Cinnamon queens pull feathers and try to mount. The Rhode Island Reds have mounted and caused a few to come to bleeding before we separated them. The Old Easter Eggers just go in and peck them gently on the head and let them know they're in charge. This has happened at the end of week 2, beginning of week 3, and the end of week 3. We've immediately separated them back to their areas after injuries started happening.
We also separated off the two Rhode Island Reds in hope of shaking up the pecking order, but after a few days they sorted themselves right back where they were. (The leader is a very big bird, the other is very small and demure, and also molting.)
So my husband and I are at a loss of what to do. The Old Flock's Easter Eggers are acting like they should - they are very nice when it comes to reminding the New Flock of the pecking order. They bump them, tap them on the head, and don't chase them continuously and hunt them down like the others, then they'll go back to doing their own thing.
The Cinnamon Queens and Rhode Islands are definitely out for blood and trying their best to make this integration as difficult as possible. We want to add more birds in the future (more gentle breeds Orps, Sussexs, Jerseys, and the like..), and I'm leaning on the fence of selling off the Queens and Reds so we can at least have more peace as we enter in more birds.
I want the New Flock to have guidance, not be pounded into the ground.
I guess I'm rambling at this point, I just wanted some experienced guidance from people who have had to go through this before.
And some pictures! Thanks for reading through all of this!
Old Flock!:
New Flock:
The Old Flock: Currently 2 Cinnamon Queens, 2 Rhode Island Reds, 2 Easter Eggers.
The Cinnamon Queens are sweet to Humans, pretty nice to their flock mates. The Rhode Island Garlic rules with an iron fist, while the other Rhode Island Ginger is.. low on the pecking order and rude about it. The two easter eggers couldn't care less about anything in the world. They love to snuggle, eat treats, and are very independent. These birds were born in Feb of 2019.
The New Flock: 6 Easter Eggers who were born on October 1st, 2019. Very peaceful, beautiful birds who have been a blast to raise. No problems between any of them.
We have a 64 foot by 25 foot run, and a large shed that we re-purposed into a nice little chicken coop that's snuggly inside with tons of room, roosts, and nesting boxes available. There are 3 feeders and 3 water dishes placed through out the entire run, and they get snacks and attention all day long. We've taken a small corner out of the run and fenced it up so the New Flock can see the Old Flock and get used to each other (as we've read on how to introduce old birds to new birds.)
Here's the problem: It's been about three weeks and I think the temporary set up has had about as much as it can take. We tried introducing the birds to each other and it was.. pretty bad. The Cinnamon queens pull feathers and try to mount. The Rhode Island Reds have mounted and caused a few to come to bleeding before we separated them. The Old Easter Eggers just go in and peck them gently on the head and let them know they're in charge. This has happened at the end of week 2, beginning of week 3, and the end of week 3. We've immediately separated them back to their areas after injuries started happening.
We also separated off the two Rhode Island Reds in hope of shaking up the pecking order, but after a few days they sorted themselves right back where they were. (The leader is a very big bird, the other is very small and demure, and also molting.)
So my husband and I are at a loss of what to do. The Old Flock's Easter Eggers are acting like they should - they are very nice when it comes to reminding the New Flock of the pecking order. They bump them, tap them on the head, and don't chase them continuously and hunt them down like the others, then they'll go back to doing their own thing.
The Cinnamon Queens and Rhode Islands are definitely out for blood and trying their best to make this integration as difficult as possible. We want to add more birds in the future (more gentle breeds Orps, Sussexs, Jerseys, and the like..), and I'm leaning on the fence of selling off the Queens and Reds so we can at least have more peace as we enter in more birds.
I want the New Flock to have guidance, not be pounded into the ground.
I guess I'm rambling at this point, I just wanted some experienced guidance from people who have had to go through this before.
And some pictures! Thanks for reading through all of this!
Old Flock!:
New Flock: