Yes. Most small chicken/egg operations keep the cockerels for meat. They are raised separate from the laying hens and raised until they are of suitable size and weight for slaughter. Most small farms with a flock of hens will keep one rooster for flock protection and to renew stock each spring.
About twice size of hens eggs
5 sq. ft.
You should never incourage a Large Fowl rooster to breed with Bantam hens. He could very seriously damage/hurt the hens, and probably kill them in the process of mating. Breeding a LF male to Bantam females can not make the egg size of the hens bigger. The hen will lay the same size egg all her life.
Yes, Battery hens are given antibiotics to help prevent/control diseases caused by the crowded living space which is 4 hens squashed inside one tiny cage which is about the same size of an A4 piece of paper.
It is not recommended to keep yearling laying hens, baby chicks, and broilers together due to differences in size, nutritional needs, and pecking behavior. Older hens may peck or even harm younger chicks, and the dietary requirements for each group differ. It is advisable to house them separately to ensure their health and well-being.
They eggs are the same size as if there is no rooster in the flock.
About the size o a volleyball Sources: own them Added: Silkies come in both Bantam and Standard sizes. However, the Standard size itself isn't very big with Roosters averaging 4 pounds and hens averaging 3 pounds. The Bantam variety that is more common in the US and represented in the APA, lists Roosters at 36 oz and hens at 32 oz.
You will use as many pieces of chicken that will fit into your pan without crowding. If using Cornish hens it will be 2-4 Cornish hens halved, depending on the size of your pan.
A 5 foot by 5 foot is good for the 4 of them.
no their babies are bat chickens which are 12 feet tall and prey on llamas
Generally, older hens lay bigger eggs.