Just a little update on Eagley that I thought you guys might appreciate.
It turns out Eagley
is showing aggression… just not to me!
Apparently he attacked a man that came to chop wood repeatedly until he left and vowed not to come back! And he has a bit of a go at the man who owns the hen house when he goes in to collect eggs!
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I was honestly *astonished* to hear this because he continues to be a total
angel around me! And my daughter, and my husband! You could write songs about what a perfect gentleman he is!

Always runs to greet me, does his ‘wing of love’, hops up on my knee for cuddles. He lets me clean his beak and face, warm my hands up under his wings, and doesn’t bat an eye if I pick up any of the hens or get involved with the flock.
It’s like they are describing a totally different bird!!
So now we have a bit of a conundrum. The chicken flock and paddock are not mine - they belong to the egg-collecting man, who agreed to take Eagley on the condition that he behaved himself (and that we help out a bit).
Which, to be fair, Eagley isn’t quite doing.
But tbh, I’d argue that Eagley is doing exactly what a good rooster should do - respecting humans, but protecting his flock from dangerous intruders!
It’s not Eagley’s fault he didn’t know these two men were safe. I think it’s up to us, as the humans, to teach him that.
If you get a new dog and it doesn’t know how to sit, you don’t blame the dog, right?
Obviously he isn’t generically human-aggressive, as he is totally at ease around myself and my husband, and even my daughter and her friends.
So now he needs training to understand that *all* humans are safe, and that he doesn’t need to attack.
But the egg-man laughed when I suggested we get together to train him and said he’s fine, he just kicks him across the coop if he tries it on

. And I get it - I’m sure he’s had bad experiences with roosters, and probably has way better things to do with his time… but aggression begets aggression, in my experience. I don’t think it’s going to help things.
So, now I don’t know what to do.
Eagley is happy where he is and the setting is pretty perfect, but if the owner isn’t willing or interested in working to build a relationship with Eagley, I’m not sure what the future holds.
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