Home Keeping Chickens General - Chickens Introducing New Chickens

Introducing New Chickens

Written by Tim Daniels   
Saturday, 28 February 2009 20:50

When new hens are brought into the flock, you may have some problems.

Keeping chickens is an addictive hobby and once you get a few birds, often you start thinking about others you'd like to introduce to the flock. The big problem is that few people realise the problems that potentially can occur. Chickens are best kept in small groups. This is how they live in the wild and just about everyone has heard of the phrases 'pecking order' or 'hen pecked' and well, it's just that, there's an order within the flock that exists. If you are lower down the 'pecking order' and you are feeding, you'll get a short sharp peck, a kind of 'what do you think you're doing, I'm senior to you, now clear off'. Every hen has their place and in the wild, nature is performing its own selection, ensuring the future survival of the species.

So, you've brought this lovely little hen home and you've popped her in with the others for all sorts of mayhem to break out and you've found this article? What do you do? Well, the first thing is only to introduce them if you have to. Could you keep them apart for a while, or even permanently? I have kept between 50 and 200 birds for the last few years and they live side by side in a field. I move them around to keep the grass fresh and now, when changing the set up and I need to put a couple of odds and ends into a pen, most of the time, if done correctly there are few problems because the birds are not complete strangers, they live nearby and see, hear and smell one another so it's not a complete shock to wake up one morning and find a couple of those birds in their house. Cockerels are an exception to this rule and each one has his own character and I know who will mix with who from spending time with them.

Introductions can be made and are sometimes necessary, it's often very hard on us the owners to see such 'cruelty' happening in the pen but often it is necessary for the first week or two until the 'pecking order' is established again.

The Same Colour Birds?

buff-orpington-cockerels

Many birds are reared in pens with the same colour and type of bird. So for example, a breeder keeps 300 Black Rock hybrid hens together in a pen until they are sold. They go to their new home and for the first time in their lives, meet Buff Orpingtons who have never met anything other than a Buff Orpington before. This is a huge shock for them, they have only ever seen the same type and colour as themselves. Understandably, the birds are shocked and will be aggressive towards the new birds who themselves are stressed at being moved from their own environment into a new place. If birds have been mixed with other colour birds, they won't find it so difficult to accept a different colour bird.

Young growers that are introduced to a flock are normally very submissive. They don't really know how to react and can get a real pecking from older hens. It is not a good idea to mix different age groups of chicks and growers as it can cause disease in the younger birds who haven't yet built up immunity but also, the older birds (often twice the size if only a month or two apart) can easily kill the youngsters.

How to Introduce New Chickens

One of the best ways to introduce new hens is to put them with your existing flock in a house and run that is new to both of them so that neither of them has an established territory, although this isn't always possible and you will be adding hens to an existing flock. Here is my top ten list of things to remember when introducing new birds:

  1. Disease! Yes, they look healthy but trust me, I've had the heartbreak of destroying the flock after I brought disease into it with new birds. Ideally they need to go into a separate run for at least 2 weeks. Observed them to make sure you don't bring a disease into the flock.
  2. Try to introduce birds that are a similar size to the flock. Youngsters will get bullied, they need to be fully mature to stand up for themselves. Watch the size of birds. A little bantam added to a flock of large fowl will probably be hard work.
  3. If possible, divide the run up for a while, get a roll of chicken wire and lash up a make-shift fence to give the newcomers an area of their own to settle in. Your established flock will get used to the site, smell and sound of the new arrivals.
  4. Add a distraction. Hang a CD and some spring greens from different places in the run. It works wonders!
  5. Ensure there are adequate food containers. The chickens that are getting bullied need to eat and if they won't come out of the house, they will soon have problems if they can't get to food. Make sure the new arrivals have had feed and a drink before they are introduced.
  6. Space. Give birds as much space as possible. Can you let the flock free range into the garden for a while? A bird that gets pecked can run off and get away easily if they have the space to do so.
  7. Blood. Chickens love pecking at red wounds. If damage is caused, remove the bird immediately or others will join in and can literally kill your chicken. If a small amount of blood is present on the comb, I usually keep a close eye but try to make sure it doesn't escalate. If more than a few spots appear, I remove the bird but try to keep it close to the flock so they can continue to see the bird.
  8. Cockerels. Yes, we've all heard of cock fighting sadly. Well, sometimes they do and it can be to the death. Many breeders place young cockerels into a pen together with an older cockerel who soon teaches them the right way to behave. I have one particularly placid cockerel who will sort the youngsters out as they start to fight over the girls but ensure you know your birds as some can kill youngsters very quickly. Every breed is different as is every cockerel.
  9. Introduce birds into the chicken house at night when it is dark but make sure you are there at day break so they don't get pecked to death in the morning... remember space.
  10. Keep an eye. Make sure you watch what happens. Can they run off and get away from an attack? Can they find somewhere to eat and drink? Don't leave them unattended for too long. Get up to let them out as soon as it's light and make sure they can get into the house at night.

Expect a certain amount of bullying. It's hard to watch but often after a week, sometimes a little longer, things suddenly click into place and the pecking order is re-established.



Last Updated on Sunday, 27 December 2009 20:46
 
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