Thanks, your routine sounds similar to mine. We have 9 runner girls, 3 buff girls and a buff drake. Their night shelter is about 90 sf, shavings for bedding, we had to keep it divided for probably six months because . . . .well . . . Zwei and some of the other girls did not like seeing Bean, our drake, on top of anyone, so they would all pile on top of him and grab him by the shoulder feathers and drag him off, swearing at him.
Anyway.
Hormones have subsided, Bean is more self-confident now (we adopted the trio a year ago), and we are one flock. I hope we can keep this up.
I wonder if your guys just have a greater need for some sort of distraction. Please bear with me, I am wondering if some kind of "toy" or something might help them burn off extra energy. Or, maybe there is a nutrient imbalance making them more aggressive.
Some people hang bundles of things for them to pick at - like a sheaf of wheat tied carefully so that no one gets wrapped up in the twine. I used to hang a length of rope over the edge of the brooder, the bottom hanging right around the top of Einz's head, and she used to nibble on that off and on all day.
Anyway.
Hormones have subsided, Bean is more self-confident now (we adopted the trio a year ago), and we are one flock. I hope we can keep this up.
I wonder if your guys just have a greater need for some sort of distraction. Please bear with me, I am wondering if some kind of "toy" or something might help them burn off extra energy. Or, maybe there is a nutrient imbalance making them more aggressive.
Some people hang bundles of things for them to pick at - like a sheaf of wheat tied carefully so that no one gets wrapped up in the twine. I used to hang a length of rope over the edge of the brooder, the bottom hanging right around the top of Einz's head, and she used to nibble on that off and on all day.