Good to know! I'm embarrassed to admit that I haven't tried anything so far.
Our younger girls are one by one getting their heads ripped open by our roo. They are separated but keep flying over the partition fencing. This is the 3rd one!

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Good to know! I'm embarrassed to admit that I haven't tried anything so far.Our younger girls are one by one getting their heads ripped open by our roo. They are separated but keep flying over the partition fencing. This is the 3rd one!
Excellent idea! I'm pretty sure they are old/big enough to be incorporated with the others but at this rate, IDK. They've been able to see each other for weeks on end so, am I causing the problem by keeping them apart? Got our 1st egg today and I think Mr. is just trying to mate. Sorry for all the questions.
Thank you for your reply RavynFallen! I agree that most are not ready. One "flew the coop" while I was standing there and was immediately mounted. She was submissive and did not get wounded. My roo also spends a lot of time patrolling the divider and doing his wing dance. It definitely can't hurt to wait it out, better safe than sorry. Thanks again!
Can never have enough chickens! If grocery bill is the limit then make sure you keep feeding more scraps and that way your grocery bill will always be higher and you can always get more chickens! I should stop being such a bad instigator of chicken math...
Sounds like that is what he's trying to do, but they don't sound quite ready yet to me... I found that waiting til they are all laying and at sufficient body size to support the roo works better... from my observations not only do cockerels have hormone surges at 'puberty' but the pullets seem to attract the roos in a frenzy right at POL... just my observations though...![]()