Annoying
It really would depend on the size of the rooster. Spurs will grow to a certain length and then start to curl. They will curl more than once but it is hard on the bird. Walking becomes difficult. Trimming spurs is not that hard.
You look at what poo it does. If it has hard poo, it is a male. If it has soft poo it is a female.
spurs are hard knobs on the rooster's legs, near the feet. They are often pointed and can be quite long.
A nub is a lumb or bump. To have a rooster peck your head into a nub means that he has worked on your head so long and hard that nothing is left but a little bump. In real life: When a rooster is eating some corn on the cob, he will work that cob until all that is left is a little nubbin. It is too little for the rooster to get hold of it and peck it out of existance.
Hard Call has 480 pages.
Hard Call was created on 2007-08-14.
I am not sure if you are talking about a hen foot or a rooster foot as in math, because I have not heard of that, but if you are talking about the bird chicken, an adult rooster usually has a spur (hard, naturally pointed growth) just above his foot, while a hen usually has just a small bump in the same spot.
The ISBN of Hard Call is 978-0-446-58040-3.
on it is not hard its eazy
A difficult question. A hard question.
I would call it a hard hat
He fainted from pain on two occasions. He badly wrenched his knee when he fell from his horse. The next day, his horse lurched throwing hard against the pommel of his saddle and twisting his sore knee. That caused him to pass out from the pain. later, he re-injured the knee, again causing him to faint. Opponents in his presidential campaign called him the fainting general and suggested that he fainted from fear .