r/chickens 23h ago

Media Two of our roosters being complete opposites

85 Upvotes

9 comments sorted by

15

u/TheOnlyWolvie 23h ago

Why so relatable 😂 I swear ours will stare at the food and then purposely peck my fingers instead... He's such an ass

8

u/JadeAnn88 23h ago

My female turkey does this. At first, I thought she was trying to go for my ring, so I just stopped offering her treats with my left hand. Made no difference. She still goes straight for my fingers, or literally anywhere aside from the food in my palm.

2

u/Imaginary_Rabbit646 4h ago

My cat does that😭 I think it’s a blind spot

5

u/Expensive-Theory-764 22h ago

My roo is like the first one and one of my hens is a savage like the second 🤣🤣

3

u/Ok-Sea-2370 20h ago

I have a bantam hen that does this. She's so cute it's hard to be mad at her.

4

u/Clucking_Quackers 22h ago

The first rooster wasn’t sharing the joint braincell with the second roo.

5

u/Accomplished_Owl_664 20h ago

It looks like you have less feed or just dust in your hand. I've noticed my roo does that when he wants more, he only does this when snacks are running low and I'm offering it to the girls. we are working on behavior, so I wear leather gloves when handfeeding him near the ladies until I can trust him again.

Let me say, they are quick learners. I slowly close my hand, and say "not nice" and take the treats away, if he tries to pull my fingers open, I stand up and if he bluffs me, he gets picked up. It's honestly a toddler tantrum. Four days in, less toddler tantrums and more of him standing back waiting for me to open my hand again.

We are also working on the word "safe," because right shoe with the rooster on it is chill, but the left shoe with a hen on it is scary. Some times when it's a new object or our roo decides he doesn't like it, I hold it up for him to peck. They don't have hands so pecking is there way of exploring the world around them. After a few days of him obsessively pecking it, he just kind of ignores it. Or he stops, thinks and walks away. Sucks we have to do this with every item. Like a new hen saddle. Or cleaning utensil. But it always takes him only a few days, even less if it's something I can leave or hang in the coop. It's all desensitizing him.

Little fyi, Mrs Nesbet knows the word safe, it means the thing flying over head is not a predator, no need for alarm. We are actively trying to change the meaning to " this thing is safe, no need for alarm."

1

u/Noa_541 7h ago

Oh, you're right, I didn't notice there was less food. I did try again with more food and they're still the same tho 😅 it's like they feel someone will take the food away. I'll try closing my hand when they do this. These roosters are 4 months old so I'm guessing they'll be easier to train

2

u/DitchDigger330 8h ago

Bro is like I want them sausages!