Chickens are easily stressed and moving to a new home is one of the most stressful events a chicken can experience. Stress can have negative behavioral and physical manifestations in chickens, including, pecking, picking and bullying. When chickens of any age bully other chickens, the behavior must be interrupted, the cause determined, and the bully, reformed. This is how I reformed a brooder bully, but the technique works with chickens of all ages.
There is a difference between establishing or maintaining one’s place in the pecking order and true bullying. Enforcement of the social hierarchy with the occasional peck or nudge is to be expected, but repeated, aggressive behavior causing injury is not normal, nor acceptable. If feathers are being picked or blood is being drawn, the behavior must be stopped. Any time a chicken is injured, they must be physically separated from the other birds for their own protection until the wound is 100% healed. Failure to do so can result in cannibalism and death.
Not long after bringing home three adorable, 6 week old bantam Cochins with frizzled feathers, the red chick, Rachel, began mercilessly pecking the other two chicks. Poor Phoebe (the white chick) took the brunt of Rachel’s aggression and was often found cowering underneath Monica. I needed to find a solution to end to the pecking. The breeder from whom we purchased the chicks assured me that Rachel had not been a problem before the move, so it was fair to deduce that stress from moving was the cause of the bullying.
Reforming the Bully
I physically segregated Rachel from the others chicks, while keeping her close to her brooder-mates. Everyone was still able to see and hear each other without danger of further injury. The chicks were in a simple, cardboard box brooder, which was ideally suited to making a chick condo. I connected a second large cardboard box to the first with duct tape. I then cut out a window in between the two boxes and secured window screening to the openings with a stapler. Hardware cloth could be used instead of window screening between the two boxes. To prevent the chicks from hopping out of or flying out of the brooder, I also secured window screening to the top of the brooder.
Rachel clearly wanted to get back to her brooder buddies, but it was necessary. In 4-5 days, the trio was physically reunited without further incident. They have been inseparable ever since. If the separation is not successful in the first few days, a few more days in quasi-segregation should do the trick.
Kathy Shea Mormino
Affectionately known internationally as The Chicken Chick®, Kathy Shea Mormino shares a fun-loving, informative style to raising backyard chickens. …Read on
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Chickens are easily stressed and moving to a new home is one of the most stressful events a chicken can experience. Stress can have negative behavioral and physical manifestations in chickens, including, pecking, picking and bullying. When chickens of any age bully other chickens, the behavior must be interrupted, the cause determined, and the bully, reformed. This is how I reformed a brooder bully, but the technique works with chickens of all ages.
There is a difference between establishing or maintaining one’s place in the pecking order and true bullying. Enforcement of the social hierarchy with the occasional peck or nudge is to be expected, but repeated, aggressive behavior causing injury is not normal, nor acceptable. If feathers are being picked or blood is being drawn, the behavior must be stopped. Any time a chicken is injured, they must be physically separated from the other birds for their own protection until the wound is 100% healed. Failure to do so can result in cannibalism and death.
Not long after bringing home three adorable, 6 week old bantam Cochins with frizzled feathers, the red chick, Rachel, began mercilessly pecking the other two chicks. Poor Phoebe (the white chick) took the brunt of Rachel’s aggression and was often found cowering underneath Monica. I needed to find a solution to end to the pecking. The breeder from whom we purchased the chicks assured me that Rachel had not been a problem before the move, so it was fair to deduce that stress from moving was the cause of the bullying.
Reforming the Bully
I physically segregated Rachel from the others chicks, while keeping her close to her brooder-mates. Everyone was still able to see and hear each other without danger of further injury. The chicks were in a simple, cardboard box brooder, which was ideally suited to making a chick condo. I connected a second large cardboard box to the first with duct tape. I then cut out a window in between the two boxes and secured window screening to the openings with a stapler. Hardware cloth could be used instead of window screening between the two boxes. To prevent the chicks from hopping out of or flying out of the brooder, I also secured window screening to the top of the brooder.
Rachel clearly wanted to get back to her brooder buddies, but it was necessary. In 4-5 days, the trio was physically reunited without further incident. They have been inseparable ever since. If the separation is not successful in the first few days, a few more days in quasi-segregation should do the trick.
Thanks so much for your great advice. I'm new to 'chickening' and absolutely LOVE it! I have one Faverolles girl & 4 Brahmas, all around 2 weeks old. One Dark Brahma is bigger (one week older) and is a bit of a bully to my Faver, pecking at her. So the Faverolles (Barbie Q- don't judge) just keeps trying to treat the Brahma like a Mama -whenever the bigger one pecks, under the chest she goes. Guess it's one way to overcome a bully, love 'em up!
I JUST brought home 7 day old chicks…2 Rhode Island Reds, 2 Barred Rocks, 2 auracanas and 1 odd Ancona. The Ancona started pecking at the other's eyes on the way home. I thought it may have been the close quarters so we got home and set them out in their temp home with water and feed. No go…still pecking rather aggressively at the others. I've set some hardware cloth in there to separate it from the others and it immediatly started attacking the wire. Now it settles down and then starts up again. I am going to give it… Read more »
Not necessarily, but certainly keep an eye on him/her.
I'm new to chickens as well. (Actually, still in the chick stage…) I have an Ameraucana that will reliably peck at another chick if the other has been picked up. It's not biased and will peck at any of the other 1 week old chicks that happens to be handled at the moment. It stops when the chick is back down but the Ameraucana will jump and nip the entire duration another is being held. Is this an early sign of bullying?
We have nine pullets and one cockerel all within the 9 to 10 month old range. One pullet was targeted by the rooster and he would chase her away from food, run after her, attack her when she would try to leave the coup and yesterday, I heard loud banging noises (no chicken sounds just loud crash sounds) coming from inside the coup, I ran in and I caught our cockerel cornering one of our girls and attacking her. She was frightened and panting. It was sad. We immediately separated him from the flock. A few months a go, we… Read more »