This poll is a great idea! Poor RIRI need help deciding which chickens to get in the near future for a small flock I want to have (later a large flock). Here’s some chicken breeds I was thinking about most, which is optimal for the best flock

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This poll is a great idea! Poor RIRI need help deciding which chickens to get in the near future for a small flock I want to have (later a large flock). Here’s some chicken breeds I was thinking about most, which is optimal for the best flock
Hatchery quality reds unfortunately don't have the best genes for health or temperment. For that reason I refuse to own any, especially a RIR roosterThis poll is a great idea! Poor RIR![]()
Yes I’ve heard of how awful the roosters can be. That makes sense, my RIR live to be 5, and she came from a breeder (I’m nearly certain)Hatchery quality reds unfortunately don't have the best genes for health or temperment. For that reason I refuse to own any, especially a RIR rooster
Heritage RIRs tend to be better about this but you still would need to find a good breeder who culls aggressively for bad attitudes and human aggression especially if you want a roo
I should clarify that the hens are usually human friendly, they can just be bully birds
yeah. I actually got 2 that were relatively calm, they are the only 2 pure ones in my flock(I think, I got 3 possibly pure from a family member of mine), and I plan on not hatching/ getting any more RIR unless they are even tempered, and somebody's giving them away for free. I love the colour, just had a really bad experience with my first flock and don't want it to happen again.Hatchery quality reds unfortunately don't have the best genes for health or temperment. For that reason I refuse to own any, especially a RIR rooster
Heritage RIRs tend to be better about this but you still would need to find a good breeder who culls aggressively for bad attitudes and human aggression especially if you want a roo
I should clarify that the hens are usually human friendly, they can just be bully birds
So if you were describing the horse you want it would be one as fast as a racehorse, one as strong as a draft horse, but only in a Palomino color. That horse does not exist: that chicken does not exist. The traits that make a chicken a great egg layer are the traits that keep it from being a great meat bird and vice versa.Like a mix of golden comet egg laying and bresse meat; and like an americauna.
Ah, now this is helpful. Unfortunately, anything that lays like a production layer is going to be unappealing for meat purposes. Breeds that lay a lot of eggs also have a tendency to lean more towards the flighty side.they can still be docile, but in more of a look don't touch kind if way.Thanks!I was thinking more on the lines of docile breed that is useful for the eggs but also sometimes able to be used for meat. Like a mix of golden comet egg laying and bresse meat; and like an americauna.
Oh! Thank you! Lol no wonder their names are Rhode Island Red!oh no, if you want docile then Rhode Island Red shouldn't even be on the list! lovely birds to look at, and there's always an exception to the rule, but in my experience, RIR are much more bitey than other breeds, the roosters are rougher with the hens(only roo I ever seen to rip out feathers as a show of dominance, but proceed to not actually mount the hen), and only breed I've seen purposefully, knowingly cannibalize( ate the corpse of a hen who died under unknown circumstance, developed taste for blood, ripped big holes in a live meat bird, drank said broiler's blood.)