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Heather Gribble 06-02-2004 03:38 PM

Roosters
 
Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours have
one and they don't want to get rid of it....it has 2 hens under its
charge....is bringing in another rooster a good idea to take it's
aggressiveness away from the humans a good idea?....I know it's not
gardening but it's "husbandry"!! Many thanks for any replies forthcoming!!



WiGard 06-02-2004 03:38 PM

Roosters
 
On Fri, 06 Feb 2004 13:58:27 +0000, Heather Gribble wrote:

Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours have
one and they don't want to get rid of it....it has 2 hens under its
charge....is bringing in another rooster a good idea to take it's
aggressiveness away from the humans a good idea?....I know it's not
gardening but it's "husbandry"!! Many thanks for any replies
forthcoming!!


The best way to curb a rooster's aggressiveness is the stewpot.


Ricky 06-02-2004 03:38 PM

Roosters
 
"WiGard" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 06 Feb 2004 13:58:27 +0000, Heather Gribble wrote:

Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours

have
one and they don't want to get rid of it....it has 2 hens under its
charge....is bringing in another rooster a good idea to take it's
aggressiveness away from the humans a good idea?....I know it's not
gardening but it's "husbandry"!! Many thanks for any replies
forthcoming!!


The best way to curb a rooster's aggressiveness is the stewpot.


It might be a little gamey? I'd brine it and put it in the smoker.



chaz 06-02-2004 05:32 PM

Roosters
 

"Heather Gribble" wrote in message
...
Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours have
one and they don't want to get rid of it....it has 2 hens under its
charge....is bringing in another rooster a good idea to take it's
aggressiveness away from the humans a good idea?....I know it's not
gardening but it's "husbandry"!! Many thanks for any replies

forthcoming!!



Bringing another rooster into the yard is only going to irritate him, unless
you find a more aggressive one, in which case, you would have a larger
problem. I had an aggressive one once who decided to try me, I wore him out
with a stick, and he didnt try that again.

The rooster is doing what he was made to do.

chaz



Roberta L. Mueller 06-02-2004 05:32 PM

Roosters
 
There is a newsgroup
sci.agriculture.poultry
I am sure you could get lots of answer there.

Roberta

"chaz" wrote in message
...

"Heather Gribble" wrote in message
...
Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours

have




Bill Spohn 06-02-2004 06:42 PM

Roosters
 
The rooster is doing what he was made to do.

Going off half-cocked...?

[email protected] 06-02-2004 07:42 PM

Roosters
 
obnoxious birds of all kinds use a tennis racket. Ingrid


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List
http://puregold.aquaria.net/
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other
compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the
endorsements or recommendations I make.

Michelle 07-02-2004 06:12 AM

Roosters
 
Catch the satanic beast when they're out and have chicken dumplings
and when they ask if you've seen him just say nah is he missing ? and
smile inocently
He just kidding
well maybe not
michelle
On Fri, 06 Feb 2004 13:58:27 GMT, "Heather Gribble"
wrote:

Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours have
one and they don't want to get rid of it....it has 2 hens under its
charge....is bringing in another rooster a good idea to take it's
aggressiveness away from the humans a good idea?....I know it's not
gardening but it's "husbandry"!! Many thanks for any replies forthcoming!!



Michelle 07-02-2004 06:13 AM

Roosters
 
On Fri, 6 Feb 2004 11:57:01 -0500, "chaz" wrote:


"Heather Gribble" wrote in message
...
Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours have
one and they don't want to get rid of it....it has 2 hens under its
charge....is bringing in another rooster a good idea to take it's
aggressiveness away from the humans a good idea?....I know it's not
gardening but it's "husbandry"!! Many thanks for any replies

forthcoming!!



Bringing another rooster into the yard is only going to irritate him, unless
you find a more aggressive one, in which case, you would have a larger
problem. I had an aggressive one once who decided to try me, I wore him out
with a stick, and he didnt try that again.

The rooster is doing what he was made to do.

chaz

That might be good advice but last time i knew someone who hit a
rooster the little #%$%& got him when his back was turrned they
really have little fear and some times no matter how big you are or
what you do the crazy things wil attack any way I think they have been
inbred or somthing and they just go nuts sooner or later


Michelle 07-02-2004 06:32 AM

Roosters
 
seriously they are fairly smart birds and will remember the tennis
racket and unless you plan to keep the racket with you the next time
he sees you without it he will try to run you off
maybe they arn't smart exactly but they seem to have a good memory
On Fri, 06 Feb 2004 19:38:38 GMT, wrote:

obnoxious birds of all kinds use a tennis racket. Ingrid


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~
List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List
http://puregold.aquaria.net/
www.drsolo.com
Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~
Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other
compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the
endorsements or recommendations I make.



Hound Dog 07-02-2004 11:07 AM

Roosters
 

"Heather Gribble" wrote in message
...
Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours have
one and they don't want to get rid of it....it has 2 hens under its
charge....is bringing in another rooster a good idea to take it's
aggressiveness away from the humans a good idea?....I know it's not
gardening but it's "husbandry"!! Many thanks for any replies

forthcoming!!


Buy a good bird dog and let it take care of the rooster for you. Might be a
little hard on the two hens though.

Hound Dog



Salty Thumb 08-02-2004 04:02 AM

Roosters
 
"Heather Gribble" wrote in
:

Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours
have one and they don't want to get rid of it....it has 2 hens under
its charge....is bringing in another rooster a good idea to take it's
aggressiveness away from the humans a good idea?....I know it's not
gardening but it's "husbandry"!! Many thanks for any replies
forthcoming!!



If you bring in another rooster, more likely than not you'll eventually end
up with one rooster and one coq au vin, but not until they cockle-doodle
you to death first.

This only applies to normal roosters and not metrosexual roosters.

Janice 09-02-2004 02:04 AM

Roosters
 
On Fri, 06 Feb 2004 13:58:27 GMT, "Heather Gribble"
wrote:

Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours have
one and they don't want to get rid of it....it has 2 hens under its
charge....is bringing in another rooster a good idea to take it's
aggressiveness away from the humans a good idea?....I know it's not
gardening but it's "husbandry"!! Many thanks for any replies forthcoming!!


I used to have chickens, and had several roosters, one is always ..
well.. Cock of the walk, dominant bird in the coup. As far as getting
another rooster, it will lead to fights, the introduced bird will most
likely get his tail feathers kicked, at least at first... However.. it
all kind of depends on the breed of chickens. If these are banties,
fighting cocks.. they're going to fight until one's dead. If they're
barred rocks, rhode island reds.. one rooster will run and try to stay
out of the other's way. With only 2 hens, an introduced rooster will
have to fight and win, or live at a good distance from the other.

Now, all that *might* keep the aggressive rooster busy. However, it
might make him worse. Personally, I'd just let the bird come on
over... get close.. then I'd grab him and put the fear of ME into him
grab hold of his head, of course that might kill him if he jerked
around too much, but you just want to get hold of him and then get him
by the legs and hang him upside down awhile, let him squawk and flap
(hold him far away) all he wants.. then once he settles down.. let him
go. He may just leave you be after that. If not, then do it again..
put him in a burlap bag for awhile.. rough it around.. not hurt the
bird.. just spook him a bit. Eventually he'll get the idea that it's
not a good idea to bug you anymore, and if he just leaves that one
person alone, but not others... the give him the treatment from
several other folks.

Birds are smarter than they're given credit for being. Granted
chickens are not "bright" but when I had them, I was surprised by how
much they could learn. I had a little white rock hen I got from a
hatchery that was culling out layers who had slowed down. She had
never seen dirt, probably not even sky, but it didn't take her more
than a couple times to learn that shovels brought worms and worms are
yummy to chickens. I could step outside the back door and pick up a
shovel and say "Chicken" (that was her name.. creative 'eh?) and she
would RUN as fast as she could toward me and she would follow a
shovel anywhere it went. The other chickens made the association, but
nowhere like "Chicken" I would step on the shovel, and she knew what
would happen and she'd start scratching right in front of the shovel,
and would ride the clod up as high as she could until I started
turning the shovel.

Are roosters legal where that trio lives? When I had chickens, they
were illegal, but now you can have 3.. hens only.

Good luck to the neighbors! I had to have a disagreement with one of
the 3 geese I had too. One was trying to intimidate me, and I grabbed
it by its neck.. not hurting it.. but I did explain to it that it was
not a good idea trying to bite me. He finally backed off, but when
he forgot himself, I advanced on him and he backed down. In nature
there is a dominant beastie, and I just had to let them know it would
be ME not them.

Just as an aside..When I got rid of all the roosters, but had 15 or so
hens, eventually one of the hens assumed the role of "rooster"
complete with Mounting, and going through all the motions of a
rooster.

Janice


Janice 09-02-2004 02:16 AM

Roosters
 
On Fri, 06 Feb 2004 13:58:27 GMT, "Heather Gribble"
wrote:

Hi all....any suggestions for an aggressive rooster...my neighgbours have
one and they don't want to get rid of it....it has 2 hens under its
charge....is bringing in another rooster a good idea to take it's
aggressiveness away from the humans a good idea?....I know it's not
gardening but it's "husbandry"!! Many thanks for any replies forthcoming!!


I used to have chickens, and had several roosters, one is always ..
well.. Cock of the walk, dominant bird in the coup. As far as getting
another rooster, it will lead to fights, the introduced bird will most
likely get his tail feathers kicked, at least at first... However.. it
all kind of depends on the breed of chickens. If these are banties,
fighting cocks.. they're going to fight until one's dead. If they're
barred rocks, rhode island reds.. one rooster will run and try to stay
out of the other's way. With only 2 hens, an introduced rooster will
have to fight and win, or live at a good distance from the other.

Now, all that *might* keep the aggressive rooster busy. However, it
might make him worse. Personally, I'd just let the bird come on
over... get close.. then I'd grab him and put the fear of ME into him
grab hold of his head, of course that might kill him if he jerked
around too much, but you just want to get hold of him and then get him
by the legs and hang him upside down awhile, let him squawk and flap
(hold him far away) all he wants.. then once he settles down.. let him
go. He may just leave you be after that. If not, then do it again..
put him in a burlap bag for awhile.. rough it around.. not hurt the
bird.. just spook him a bit. Eventually he'll get the idea that it's
not a good idea to bug you anymore, and if he just leaves that one
person alone, but not others... the give him the treatment from
several other folks.

Birds are smarter than they're given credit for being. Granted
chickens are not "bright" but when I had them, I was surprised by how
much they could learn. I had a little white rock hen I got from a
hatchery that was culling out layers who had slowed down. She had
never seen dirt, probably not even sky, but it didn't take her more
than a couple times to learn that shovels brought worms and worms are
yummy to chickens. I could step outside the back door and pick up a
shovel and say "Chicken" (that was her name.. creative 'eh?) and she
would RUN as fast as she could toward me and she would follow a
shovel anywhere it went. The other chickens made the association, but
nowhere like "Chicken" I would step on the shovel, and she knew what
would happen and she'd start scratching right in front of the shovel,
and would ride the clod up as high as she could until I started
turning the shovel.

Are roosters legal where that trio lives? When I had chickens, they
were illegal, but now you can have 3.. hens only.

Good luck to the neighbors! I had to have a disagreement with one of
the 3 geese I had too. One was trying to intimidate me, and I grabbed
it by its neck.. not hurting it.. but I did explain to it that it was
not a good idea trying to bite me. He finally backed off, but when
he forgot himself, I advanced on him and he backed down. In nature
there is a dominant beastie, and I just had to let them know it would
be ME not them.

Just as an aside..When I got rid of all the roosters, but had 15 or so
hens, eventually one of the hens assumed the role of "rooster"
complete with Mounting, and going through all the motions of a
rooster.

Janice



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