The rooster could be ill, it could be the wrong season ( crowing is part of setting up territories and calling females into his group, if it is not breeding season his male hormones will drop and he will have no desire to crow) Or He could be a beta rooster - if there is more than one rooster on the property at least one will always be alpha doing most of the crowing, others down the pecking order may just stay quiet, accepting that they are not at the top of the pecking order.
No, actually it would take the same amount of time. A young male rooster will become ready when the time is right. It has nothing to do with interaction with other birds.
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.
This is actually not such strange behavior. If there is no rooster among the flock the dominant hen will often take the position of guardian of the flock and exhibit much of the role of a rooster. In some cases where the rooster is timid and not up to the job, a dominant hen will take over.
He probably has a cold or something which is affecting his ability to crow as it I'd probably painful for him. When he's better I'm sure he'll be crowing all day and rule the roost once more! :D
Eww a crow! those things ate my cat. Alive! 3-6 weeks.
No, a bandy rooster does not lay eggs. Only hens can lay eggs as they are the female chickens. Roosters do not have the ability to lay eggs.
If u play baseball then u must know what a crow is. take a crow hop and throw it aahard as u can!
It takes them 5 to 6 days to hatch!!
No, squirting a rooster with water may startle him for a moment, but it will not stop him from crowing. Crowing is a natural behavior in roosters, and they will continue to do it regardless of being squirted with water.
about a year
a day