- Apr 9, 2011
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Also, though you're less likely to get holes punched in you, or otherwise suffer bloody injury, it was a recently despurred RIR rooster that gave me my permanent black-hornet-sting adhesion and nerve injury thirty years ago last March. So aggressive roosters who go after people need to be considered very, very carefully.
You can glue ping pong balls on the aggressive guys....Mighta helped !
Wasn't my rooster; belonged to a licensed Master Falconer who lived in the cabin, and raised chickens to feed his Prairie Falcons. The rooster was a right (editorial comment withheld) and finally met his end after he took to waking up when friends drove in at night and the porch light came on, and ambushing them from the plum trees. It was early on in his reign of terror when he got me, and pretty much my fault; I had been making lists in my mind on the bus, heading over to weed my garden, and had, in my deep concentration, walked right through the flock while they were eating some scratch the falconer had thrown down.
ON the other hand: thirty-one years ago, it's a long time to be punished for a moment's inattention.