You said your Polish is just starting to lay and the others are the youngest? So they are all less than a year? That would mean they are cockerels, not roosters. A rooster is over a year old. I mention this because age can be important when discussing male behavior. They may still be young enough that the hormones haven’t kicked in. That’s when things can change, and fast. A friendly young male can become a nightmare. I’m not saying it will happen, just that it can. You need to keep a close eye on both of them.
And as was already mentioned, you need more females if you want to keep both. Even if the boys are gentlemen they could still overmate the girls. I had that issue with my first birds because I decided to keep a well behaved boy with too few girls. Better to get more pullets now while everyone is still young so there isn’t too big an age gap.
You said that you hoped you didn’t have to take him “to the woods.” I really hope that if you have to get rid of one of the boys you don’t plan on abandoning him in the wild. That would be cruel. It would be better to give him away to someone to become dinner if you don’t want to do the dead yourself.
And as was already mentioned, you need more females if you want to keep both. Even if the boys are gentlemen they could still overmate the girls. I had that issue with my first birds because I decided to keep a well behaved boy with too few girls. Better to get more pullets now while everyone is still young so there isn’t too big an age gap.
You said that you hoped you didn’t have to take him “to the woods.” I really hope that if you have to get rid of one of the boys you don’t plan on abandoning him in the wild. That would be cruel. It would be better to give him away to someone to become dinner if you don’t want to do the dead yourself.