Friday, January 27, 2017

Three hens, no rooster

Otis

So our experiment with having a rooster is over...tonight Otis went to that grand chicken coop in the sky, culled by us after fighting with Callie, the largest yet most submissive of our hens. 


Otis' story began a couple of years ago when, we made a big, sentimental mistake and acquired some eggs from a friend so our brooding hen Ellen could hatch them out and become a mother. We found good homes for three out of the four of Ellen's chicks. Otis we kept, mainly because roosters are hard to place and we figured we'd try having one and see if he'd end up a good addition to our flock.


Otis and Ellen

 Otis ended up causing us no problems.... while his mother Ellen was alive. We realize now it was her influence that kept him in line. After Ellen died (she was put down several months ago after suffering a debilitating tumor) his personality became less cooperative, and more typically rooster-ish.


The attack this afternoon was not Otis' first infraction. A few weeks ago he attacked Chloe, our lovely barred rock, and opened up a sizable gash on her comb, which bled profusely. Chloe spent Christmas morning in our bathroom getting doctored up, and when she was ready to go back out Otis was put in a separate pen for a few days so that both would forget their altercation, which chickens often do. Brain the size of a peanut and all that.  

But if we thought the temporary time-out/isolation worked, we were wrong. As I mentioned earlier, today I found Otis full-on fighting with Callie, our young Silver-Laced Wyandotte. And so, before another hen was injured, we decided Otis had to be culled. 

And while it's never easy to put a bird down, as I was carrying Otis out into the garden and Big Ag was loading the shotgun, I thought about how many chickens grace my dinner plate every single year, and how each one of those chicken dinners represents a bird that died just like Otis was about to. 

That's one thing that keeping animals has made me thankful for -- I never take for granted the meat or poultry I eat. I know something that once lived and breathed lost its life in order to be consumed by me, and I don't consume it as mindlessly as I once did.

And so I say farewell to Otis and to roosters in general. We're planning on getting another couple of hens this spring and I'm sure there will be plenty of pecking-order drama when we integrate them into our flock of (now) only three birds. But while it may be difficult to watch the pecking order re-shuffle itself, it will settle down in time, which probably would not have happened with Otis. 

Sometimes it's survival of the fittest, but in Otis' case it was a different rule, no less valid or important: Survival of the congenial.





6 comments:

  1. Roosters do what roosters do, and it is often what you experienced with Otis. Thank goodness your girls are okay!

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    1. Thank you! I have heard so many awful rooster tales, they seem to outnumber the "good rooster" stories 5 to 1. I do feel the girls are much safer now. If a rooster won't protect and is a danger, sadly he's just not necessary.

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  2. We were fortunate to have a nice rooster, Toby, who died last year. If he had been mean to our girls, he would have been gone. It's a crapshoot when you bring home or raise a rooster.

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    1. That's the truth! We even had one really mean hen once who would attack my husband and I! We gave her away to a friend in the hopes of being rehabilitated but I regret that, because her behavior did not improve.

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  3. My extremely uneducated thought was that roosters weren't mean to hens! I thought they only fought with other roosters. Sorry it came to this. So the big question is what will you cook?

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    1. Well, he was a bantam, so the answer is...nothing. Not enough meat on him to do anything with. A lot of people claim to be willing to take roosters for meat around here, but you can never be sure if they are using them in cock-fighting training, so we decided to handle it ourselves and just dispose of the carcass, to ensure a humane death for him. And I have seen SO many roosters injure hens! When I chicken-sat for the neighbors their rooster almost killed one of their hens. Crazy, right?

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