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Please, do NOT worry about this! I raise roosters as well as hens, and I've actually found that properly handled roosters are MUCH calmer and more docile than my hens. I had seven roosters at one point ( I rescue, rehabilitate, and rehome chickens, so most went to new homes ), a Silkie, three Old Engish Game, a Japanese, a Rhode Island Red x Black Star, and a Dutch x D'Anver, and another batch I had was the same Rhode Island as well as his two brothers, two Campines, a different Japanese, and a Welsummer. Roosters tend to come and go pretty quickly with me because people don't want them, I train them to be tolerable pets, then they go to a new home, while I maintain my own small flock ( currently six, but fostering seven others ) that has a couple established roosters.
Anyway, like I said, I train chickens - and in that, ALL of my roosters homed together in two separate flocks - standard and bantam flocks - and all got together just fine. Very minimal fighting, and all fights were without blood and usually settled in seconds, but they know I'm the boss and what I say goes. That, and my Sizzle ( Silkie x frizzled Cochin - ugly, but sweet ), Mop, maintains a VERY tight balance on the rules and where everyone is in the pecking order, as I say it is ( the highest in the pecking order - and thus those who are fed first, get more special treats, etc. are the most well behaved ). My roosters ONLY crow when they're out, and have been out for awhile, of food or water, or when I've left them for a prolonged period - and even then, they usually only crow for about ten minutes, then silence until I return home. I even live in an area where roosters are illegal, but because I've been able to show that mine are so well-behaved, the city doesn't mind.
If you spend time with your roosters, you can have a flock of them with no noise, no bloodshed, no discourse whatsoever. They are VERY capable of being totally sweet, calm, and nice - and breed has NOTHING to do with it. I've dealt with breeds KNOWN for their aggression ( Game breeds, Campines, Rhode Island Reds, Welsummer, etc. ) and I've had no issue with them. Actually, the biggest issue I ever had was from my Silkie! The Welsummer I dealt with was even a full-grown adult who was NOT human friendly at all, and within a couple weeks he was sleeping on the foot of my bed, sitting in my lap while I watched movies, and would even let other people approach him.
If you want to keep your baby, and it DOES end up being a boy, please, please, please don't end up just throwing him out and thinking that his behaviour is unstoppable and irreversible! I can and I will help you if you need ANY knowledge on how to keep aggression down and having docile roosters. I even know of a rescue way out in Virginia, I think it is, that rescues and rehabilitates fighting cocks to be able to mingle with other cocks without issue, so IT IS NOT IMPOSSIBLE to keep your roosters without fighting!
I admit I'm fairly new to the chicken world - a year as of August, actually - but I have had little to do ( no work, no school, etc. ) outside of watch my chickens and learn how to work with them. That and I already have a firm understanding of dog psychology, and how to train them, so I passed on a lot of that to my chickens and it's worked. If you'd like to start with, you can check out my blog on my studies and observations of how to deal with chickens, and how to work with their psychology here:
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