A very mean Rooster and a little Girl

dirtlooter

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Back around 1975, I was back up in Arkansas visiting for a couple of months before I went into the Air Force to be a radio repairman. I was floating between several relatives, working around their homes at what ever for my room and board. I was at one uncle's house for several days so that I could help him get a fence put up around about 5 acres so that they could keep some cows inside it.

My uncle had various animals around the place including a bunch of laying hens and one very mean but beautiful game rooster named Henry. My uncle called the rooster that because his father-n-law's last name was Henry and he was a fairly mean man. Henry was very territorial and would challenge everyone and everything that invaded his space. Now the eggs had to be gathered everyday by someone because the family ate them. Yep, I got flogged several times by the mean bird but I quickly got me a slender stick to wack him with and he soon realized that I meant business.

However, Kathy, my 5 year old cousin, didn't fair so well and got flogged numerous times. I would hear her getting flogged and come running to get the stupid bird off of her. Kathy totally hated Henry and for good reason but my uncle needed a rooster. So, when my work was finished, I moved on to another relative's home for a few days to help them with clearing out some brush etc. So, about a week later, my uncle called and wanted me to come by and help him on a Saturday. As I walked into their home, Kathy came running up to me and with a huge smile, told me, "We ate Henry!" I looked over to my uncle and he nodded yes, said that he found another more tranquil rooster. Kathy was happy now, she could collect her eggs in peace. As I left that day, I could hear her singing "No more Henry, no more Henry."
 

kingskid1611

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You have some great life experiences which has left you with wonderful stories....Thanks for sharing
 

dirtdigginfool

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Dirt...always enjoy your posts, whether you and Mama are out detecting, battling for Frosty's or whether you're laid up getting healed up. Keep'em coming my friend, Ddf.
 

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Great story, thank you for sharing! :occasion14:
 

devldog

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Great story Dirtlooter. It seems that everyone enjoyed your story.......everyone but Henry that is.
 

Stringtyer

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When I was a kid, we had a rooster that hated me ... and I hated him. When I went to gather eggs, he would come over and peck/flap/claw at me and I'd run to the house. My mom told me to get a little stick and shoo him away. Well, I headed out to the chicken yard and, on the way, I picked up a stick about 2 feet long and 3/4" in diameter. When that rooster came at me, I didn't shoo him away, I beat the crap out of him. I didn't kill him but I sure made him sorry for his sins.
 

Charlie P. (NY)

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We usually cull ours for temperament. Right now we have a little bantam Japanese Black-tail that was a "drop-off" (the hens are Americana and Barred Rocks) and a few weeks ago I saw him heading for a fox that was attacking the hens.

Years ago we had a big gray Americana rooster named "Gandalf" who had 1-1/2" spurs. He went after THE ADMIRAL regularly, always an attack from behind, but kept his distance from me. The barn's prior owner had a hockey-playing son and there are a few bladeless sticks hanging around. One day THE ADMIRAL came in and said "I think I killed Gandalf". I went out and saw the stick propped up against the fence and Gandalf's lifeless body with his head lolling down where his neck had been broken.

I went in and said "Yep, I think you did, too."
 

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FreeBirdTim

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When I was a kid, we had a rooster that hated me ... and I hated him. When I went to gather eggs, he would come over and peck/flap/claw at me and I'd run to the house. My mom told me to get a little stick and shoo him away. Well, I headed out to the chicken yard and, on the way, I picked up a stick about 2 feet long and 3/4" in diameter. When that rooster came at me, I didn't shoo him away, I beat the crap out of him. I didn't kill him but I sure made him sorry for his sins


It took a lot of courage for you to abuse that tiny bird with a stick. What's really amazing is that you're actually proud to tell your animal abuse story here.
 

FreeBirdTim

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Years ago we had a big gray Americana rooster named "Gandalf" who had 1-1/2" spurs. He went after THE ADMIRAL regularly, always an attack from behind, but kept his distance from me. The barn's prior owner had a hockey-playing son and there are a few bladeless sticks hanging around. One day THE ADMIRAL came in and said "I think I killed Gandalf". I went out and saw the stick propped up against the fence and Gandalf's lifeless body with his head lolling down where his neck had been broken.

And another animal abuse story. Nice...
 

huntsman53

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dirtlooter,

Your story brings back painful but at the same time fond memories of when I was about 3 or 4 years old. My dad raised Game Roosters to sell and had quite a few Game Hens and one ornery Game Rooster that would come after me every time I came off the screened back porch where we lived. The Rooster would fly up onto the top of my' head, peck and flog me and on several occasions spurred me on my' head and shoulders. My Mom told my Dad about this on several occasions but since he kept the mean Rooster around for fertilizing eggs, he kind of blew it off since he was never there when it happened and didn't see the attack on me. Well, one kind of warm Saturday morning in the late Fall, my Dad was off from work for once and was splitting kindling on a large stump. I stepped on to the back porch steps when coming outside and immediately, the Rooster flew up on my' head and started flogging and pecking me. My Dad saw this and quickly ran over, grabbed the Rooster by it's neck, took him over to the stump and quickly lopped off his' head with the double bitted axe. My Dad then stated "Now let's see you peck anybody else you son of a b&*$%" and then hollered at my Mom "Myrtle, come and get this Rooster and pluck him because we are going to have him for supper". Boy was I glad to see that Rooster go!
 

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FreeBirdTim

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Huntsman53, you really have to scratch your head on my comments? Beating an animal with a stick is animal abuse and will get you arrested in most states. That's nothing to be proud of or to be bragging about.
 

Duckshot

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Huntsman53, you really have to scratch your head on my comments? Beating an animal with a stick is animal abuse and will get you arrested in most states. That's nothing to be proud of or to be bragging about.

Well I don't like sunny-side-up and you gotta scramble the eggs with something. Besides, its a darn pain in the neck trying to cook eggs when the hen that layed them keeps hopping up on the stove.

Burning a hens feet on the stove, now that's abusive. It'd be a crime not to shoo her off.
 

FreeBirdTim

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Sorry, guys, I know commenting about animal abuse is a lost cause here. But I just had to give it a shot.

I also know that roosters are nasty critters that will peck your eyes out if you give them a chance.
 

FreeBirdTim

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Some people confuse pet animals with livestock

Nope, I just think that animals that are slaughtered for food should be killed in merciful way and not abused first for some sick person's pleasure...
 

Duckshot

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Nope, I just think that animals that are slaughtered for food should be killed in merciful way and not abused first for some sick person's pleasure...

I agree. That's how come when I snatch a duck from its pen, I run it up against the side of the pen then grab it by of his hind legs. Thats the most humane way, trust me! Then it goes head first into a dog cage along with its friends that got the same treatment, then off to the slaughterhouse where it gets shoved head first into a stainless steel cone where it is relieved of the use of it's central nervous system. It ain't to glamorous, but that's where Thanksgiving dinners come from.
 

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