Wednesday, April 25, 2012



Secret Of The Rooster's Crow

He is an icon of the morning. In most every rural scene he crows to greet the dawn. He says"Cook-a-doodle-do". Biblical scenes center around his call, and he takes top billing in the folklore of countless cultures. But why is it that the rooster gets so excited about dawn's rosy fingers? Does he take his job as the farm's alarm clock too seriously? Does he just have something important to say?
Turns out the answer is simpler than you might think. First, roosters crow all the time. The connection with the sun coming up is a misconception. Roosters crow whenever they feel like it. Morning, noon and night, not to mention afternoon, evening and the parts of the day that don't have names. Roosters crow to show that a certain place in the coop is their turf. They even gloat when a hen cackles after laying an egg. My roosters are now 8 weeks old. They will start to crow when they are 4 to 5 months old. I am longing for that sound.