Which Rooster should I ax?

3KillerBs

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Jul 10, 2009
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No way no how should you keep the human aggressive boy. A pain to keep, sucks the joy from having chickens, and a potential liability and danger.
I would probably give the other rooster a chance to see how he behaves being the only boy. But if it's not working out, get rid of him and try another one. Lots of people try to rehome their friendly roosters all the time.

Yes, this.

I happen to have a too-nice-for-the-crockpot gentleman up for sale right now. :)
 

lomine

Crowing
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Aug 7, 2015
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Agree with the others, Alpha needs to go. I'd give Beta a chance after Alpha is gone to see how he is on his own.

If Beta doesn't work out, you can try another older rooster or start again with a chick. I find males raised among the flock to be a little better behaved if there are mature hens around to give them a good peck for misbehavior.
 

Stellasmomma

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May 23, 2022
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I have an established flock of chickens with 23 hens and 2 roosters (1 Ameraucana and 1 Spanish game?) and they are all about 1 year old now. They were all raised together except for Spanish rooster (not exactly sure on the breed but suspect it’s a game) was introduced later as we rehabilitated one of them from our neighbors as they’re ratio was too high. Ever since we introduced the second rooster we’ve been having problems, it’s been several months now and the roosters get along fine, the Spanish rooster is now the Alpha and the Ameraucana is the beta, but our hens have been suffering. And I’m at the point that I’m thinking I need to ax one of them, they both have good and bad qualities and not sure if those qualities will change if they become the lone rooster.

Ameraucana (beta);
Pros: he is large and beautiful and he is friendly with humans.
Cons: he relentlessly mates with all the hens, especially in the evening, and because of that my hens have bald spots.

Spanish something (alpha)
Pros: he looks after the hens and keeps my Ameraucana in check when he gets too aggressive with the hens.
Cons: he is very aggressive with humans and never backs down, even when we catch him and pin him down, he will attack again when we let him go. He’s also fairly small and mostly skin and bone.

So I was wondering if the Ameraucana regains his alpha status will he be friendlier with the hens (he was nice to them before), or will he abuse them even more with no other rooster to chase him away?

On the other hand the other rooster is an alpha for a reason and would do a better job of protecting my hens (I let them free range) and I can manage him, and when I catch him he calms down and can be handable, but he is a serious pain in the butt. Also if my suspicion is true and he is a game rooster, then I’m not sure if I want to pass on those wild genes to the next generation?
Glad I found this thread I have not kept Roosters before and in my last group of chicks ended up with 2 Jersey Giant Roo's One is defiantly the Alpha and so far they have both been nice and are right now rather afraid of the ladies if they let them know they don't like them. They are actually terrified of my little silkie hen but she started letting them know who was boss from the time they were small ( shes a couple years old) but its good to know if they start being troublesome that they need to go! So far they are good at protecting the girls so fingers crossed they stay nice!!
 

Ebony Rose

Free Ranging
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May 26, 2009
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You spanish dude needs to find his way to freezer camp.
Your americauna dude ought to gentle with the girls once he no longer needs to fear being attacked by the spanish dude when he mates.

I agree with @Isadora too, If americauana dude doesn't gentle (give him a few weeks to realize he doesn't need to GRAB an opportunity to mate), but if he doesn't gentle or if he becomes human aggressive, you can send him to freezer camp and purchase a few straight-run day-old chicks to incorporate into your flock. You're sure to get at least 3 or 4 new cockerels for your hens to select from.

If you do end up going the day-old-chick route, pay close attention to how the hens behave around the sexually-maturing cockerels. The cockerels that your girls love, are likely the best choice to keep. The hens KNOW which cockerel will have THEIR best interest at heart, and they'll show their 'man' respect and affection.
 

NorthwoodsChick

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May 16, 2021
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Welcome!
Human aggression is never a good thing, and he's likely to only get worse over time. He's a danger to any person who shows up, and can leap high enough to take out eyeballs. He should go into someone's crock pot, very soon.
Your other rooster might mellow out when the game cock is gone, and it's time to find out. He either will do well again, or it will be time to raise a few cockerels and try again.
Mary
x2
 

SmiYa0126

Songster
Jul 6, 2021
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Neither rooster is a good rooster. Cull both and try again. No one deserves to be attacked, people or hens. It causes tension in the flock, and it ruins your enjoyment of the birds - cull both of these.

If you want a rooster, go to the feed store, call the county extension agent, contact 4-h groups, a local poultry club. People always have too many roosters, and what you want is one that is so darn nice, he hasn't been asked to supper.

Culling the first rooster is always hard, but afterwards you will wonder why did you put up with that behavior as long as you did.

Mrs K
Just keep in mind if you get a rooster from another flock he may be a carrier for diseases, I traded my guineas for a rooster and they all got sick. He never showed any symptoms. Three of them haven't fully recovered. If you can wait I would raise them from chicks.
 

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