Meri Maura
May 2024 bring less misery 🥂
I pet my roosters all of the time and they have never tried to be meanHe is exactly at the age where the darling chick turns into the hormonal nightmare.
I have followed this advice and it's worked so far:
There are no guarantees.
- No handling/petting of the males except for nighttime, off-the-roost health checks.
- Walk through them regularly -- never aggressively chasing them, but accidentally-on-purpose passing through the space they occupy in the normal course of things while tending the coop and run. (I have a couple buckets and other loose pieces of equipment to rearrange when I need an excuse).
- Keeping the attitude that I am not part of the flock, not even top bird. I am The Giant Who Brings Food -- a force of nature outside the realm of chicken comprehension like a horse or a cow.
- Keeping the attitude that there are many roosters in the world and that I have a crockpot and know how to use it.
Much of what I've learned has come from @Mrs. K and @Folly's place as well as many others over the years.

I had one that I didn't pet much and he became a bad boy.