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- #11
Honestly I'm not sure what my goal is with my flock. I guess that is something to make a plan for. I want to be self sufficient for myself and my dogs (I feed a raw diet to my dogs) and i want to start a garden. That is as far as my thought process went prior to getting chickens. I never knew I would enjoy a backyard chickens as much as I have.You don't have four roosters, you have four immature cockerels. There is a big difference in behaviors between immature cockerels and mature roosters. The hormones of puberty can really affect their behaviors. Most (not all but most) cockerels mellow out when they actually mature but it can be a rough road through puberty.
Also, since you have multiple cockerels, one is dominant. The dominant one "can" suppress the actions of the less dominant. I say "can", and not always because different chickens can react differently. I've never seen it but some people on here say they have seen cockerels working together to gang rape a pullet. That's not suppressing, that's cooperating. You can never know for sure how any flock of chickens will act, but the dominant suppressing the others' behaviors is what I typically see. You can never tell how a cockerel will react if you take away the dominant one. A great one may become a monster. Or a rough one may straighten up if you remove his competition.
All this makes it really hard to choose at cockerel age. All you can do is the best you can.
Why do you want a rooster and what are your goals toward that rooster. The only reason you need a rooster is if you want fertile eggs. Everything else is personal preference. Nothing wrong with personal preference, I have a few of those myself, but that is a choice instead of a reason. I generally suggest you keep as few boys as you can and still meet your goals. That's not because you are guaranteed more problems with more boys but because the more boys you have the more likely you are to have problems. Sometimes that best number is zero.
Knowing your goals is important in making a decision. Your goals are what counts, not mine. If your goal is to hatch chicks, what traits do you want in those chicks? What do you want them to look like or what other traits. If hatching chicks is one of your goals try to choose a boy that is most like you want them to be. If you have other goals then try to base your goals on that. I personally like the look of a mixed breed flock, others prefer them to all look the same. Pure personal preference.
I agree that human aggression is a deciding factor. For me, Yellow would be gone. That's one of my preferences, I want to enjoy being around the chickens, not worrying about protecting my back. I can't make a decision on the others.
I want my backyard chickens to help me with the garden. I want good temperament and good egg laying.
I have a batch of meat birds that I have had for a week now. Going to see how much I enjoy that process.
I never knew I would have ever put this much thought into a chicken ever in my life but I am glad this is where I am at.