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they seem to be getting along and everything..... i am not trying to be rude but what makes it too many? are there certain behaviors that the hens or roosters will have by having too many roosters?
For an example, when my flock was younger, we had a horrible ratio. Actually, worse than yours 3-4 roos (one was only there for a small amount of time before he passed away from illness) to about 10 hens. I loved all of my birds and found it difficult to part with them. The 3 surviving roos were all mean. They went after me whenever I got close, and even though I stood my ground and never showed weakness, they continued to press on. I did get sick of not being able to see my own birds, though, so a friend took them to free-range them on his farm and take care of the tick population. We checked on them a few months after and they were still alive and well. Don't get me wrong, they still felt like my babies as I was packing them up and exiling them...but I felt my hens and I both deserved a less stressful life. The roosters bickered between each other, too. And some of them were over-mating some of my hens.
If you don't see any obvious signs of a troubled flock, you might be lucky. But alot of roosters will cause issues when you're not around to see them. Like they may become aggressive with hens, over-mating, fighting with each other (it does cause a little stress, even though it may seem to be none of the hen's business, because they keep screwing with the pecking order), etc. Chances are, you just have a mean rooster. Probably doesn't have anything to do with this if you don't see any obvious issues. But, there is always that chance. This might have even caused it. When roos are always in competition, it tends to change them. The choice is yours. I must agree that it is very unfortunate that there aren't more non-aggressive ways of dealing with this, but there just isn't enough room in the world to keep every rooster alive. Especially the ones that there is no or little help for. And trust me, I've never had any success with 'un-meaning' a rooster.