FluffyBottomBantams
Run by roosters
I’ve seen and emu peck/pinch a person before and I decided that I’m not going to get close enough to one for that to be a possibility haha
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I love Emus!I’ve seen and emu peck/pinch a person before and I decided that I’m not going to get close enough to one for that to be a possibility haha
I might be open to it. But only If you can guarantee I’ll leave the encounter with all the fingers I started out with
I do not like silkies and Emus are really intimidating to me. And if your dogs are aloud to bark incessantly or your kids are aloud to run around your yard screaming constantly then my bantam roosters are aloud to crow...thank you..I’m finished now lol
You are quite correct, rooster crows are fascinating! Like musical phrases.My hubby's mother was from France, where she wrote the crow of a rooster as, "Co-co-ri-co." His grandmother, from Northern Germany, wrote a rooster's crow as "Ki-ki-ri-ki." Americans say it's "Cock-a-doodle-doo." (WOW... even my spell-checker knew that!)
Now that I've had multiple breeds of chickens over the past twenty-some years, I have noticed that Crevecoeur roosters mostly have four-note crows, and Delawares and Nankins have five-note crows, the Delawares ending with a little extra note that sounds like "yeah," as in, Yeah, I said that. I think it's pretty consistent within a breed to have a certain number of "notes," but there are also enough individual differences to tell individuals within the same breed apart just on their crow, for me.
Is that just my opinion, or have you noticed that, too?
You are quite correct, rooster crows are fascinating! Like musical phrases.
gotta agreeUnpopular opinion: Your chickens are not people. If you are chickening them as people, odds are you're doing something a) unnecessary and/or b) wrong. You may also be people-ing wrong.