Yes, a rooster can live alone but would rather be with a hen or two, but roosters can live without a hen, I have living proof of that in my lap. A bantam roo named Steve. He is unable to live wit hour other bantams on account that he fights with Jason, another rooster. Another standard rooster, Pepper lives alone, we had to give him away because he was mean and he lives alone. So yes roosters can live alone.
Oh yes, hens and roosters live together just fine, problems arise when roosters and roosters live together as they like to have fights to see who will be the dominant bird. The dominant male will get his choice of hens to breed with. Chicken have what is called a pecking order and that means that the strongest birds get the best roosting spot and the choices food.
Well a lone rooster will more than likely run away in search of hens. It would be better to get him a female friend or more.
Yes it is fine for a rooster to live alone. I have had chickens my entire life, and that has never been an issue.
Yes. A hen can lay eggs without a roost. However, those eggs will be infertile and will never hatch.
The rooster who lives alone... is in badcompany!
yes
Hen. A rooster is a chicken of the male gender, so the opposite (in gender) is the female, or hen.
Nothing. Hen, laying hen, broiler hen. The amount of feed they receive and the age they live to is about the only difference. The laying hen will live to produce eggs and the broiler hen will eat well until she reaches optimal weight and be processed into meat.
If you are taking about the hen sitting on eggs then it will make things easy for you and the hen. you will have a better outcome if you move the hen or take the rooster out.
Yes All chickens will lay eggs without the need for a rooster. All a rooster does is fetilize the eggs, it does not induce the hen to lay an egg, she will do this anyway.
Hen or pullet
No, It doesn't matter if the rooster and the hen are different breeds. They will live happily together.
their is no such thing as a hen rooster, a hen is rooster is a male chicken, and a hen is a female chicken.
their is no such thing as a hen rooster, a hen is rooster is a male chicken, and a hen is a female chicken.
A rooster is the male and the hen is the female .
The rooster is the male, the hen is the female.
No, a hen cannot lay a fertilized egg without exposure to a rooster. However, a hen can lay fertilized eggs up to a week after the male is taken out of the flock.
Hen. A rooster is a chicken of the male gender, so the opposite (in gender) is the female, or hen.
Nothing. Hen, laying hen, broiler hen. The amount of feed they receive and the age they live to is about the only difference. The laying hen will live to produce eggs and the broiler hen will eat well until she reaches optimal weight and be processed into meat.
Female=hen, Male=rooster
Chicken Hen and Rooster Duck hen and Drake Turkey hen and Tom Peahen and Peacock
If a hen is in with NO rooster, and lays an egg, then that egg is infertile and cannot hatch.
Not typically. Any breed of hen can make a crowing sound but it is often done by hens in a flock that has no rooster. The alpha hen in a flock of chickens without a rooster will often take over the "guard" duties of a rooster.