I would make no excuses for him, no human emotions or reasoning. Dangerous behavior is not tolerated with young children around and roosters, unless rare and of a selected breeding program, are a dime a dozen. I would cull him.
When starting your next rooster, if you choose to do so, start with a known, gentle breed ( naked neck, Cochin, brahma, OEGB, Serama,Silky, D'Uccle) and start from the beginning with submission techniques.
I've also found that roosters that become extremely tame as young chickens seem to have more aggression issues if very tame as a young bird. But, perhaps this is just because people who tend to tame their young birds are also less likely to have experience in dealing with roosters and other aggressive male animals. Meaning that typically it's the backyard new owner of chickens that wants a pet that sits in their lap who ends up with aggression issues. You rarely see old farmers or chicken breeders complaining of aggressive roosters.
I see this a lot in horses and even in dogs. Newcomers to horses, especially, will be very surprised when their sweet little baby colt suddenly becomes a raging, obnoxious, aggressive, two year old stallion that they have no idea how to handle. Then, they get hurt and end up with a dangerous stallion because it wasn't taught proper respect from before it even knew it was a stallion. It was a " lap" colt who walked all over the owners.
When starting your next rooster, if you choose to do so, start with a known, gentle breed ( naked neck, Cochin, brahma, OEGB, Serama,Silky, D'Uccle) and start from the beginning with submission techniques.
I've also found that roosters that become extremely tame as young chickens seem to have more aggression issues if very tame as a young bird. But, perhaps this is just because people who tend to tame their young birds are also less likely to have experience in dealing with roosters and other aggressive male animals. Meaning that typically it's the backyard new owner of chickens that wants a pet that sits in their lap who ends up with aggression issues. You rarely see old farmers or chicken breeders complaining of aggressive roosters.
I see this a lot in horses and even in dogs. Newcomers to horses, especially, will be very surprised when their sweet little baby colt suddenly becomes a raging, obnoxious, aggressive, two year old stallion that they have no idea how to handle. Then, they get hurt and end up with a dangerous stallion because it wasn't taught proper respect from before it even knew it was a stallion. It was a " lap" colt who walked all over the owners.