noisy rooster
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tonym911

Original Poster:

18,936 posts

228 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
Apologies for thread title but I couldn't come up with anything that didn't sound bad.
Neighbours in big house c. 30 metres away have hens. No problem, it's something we've considered ourselves.
BUT. They also have a cock.
You can probably guess the rest. This fella has no sense of time and will suddenly start crowing at any hour of the day or night. Usually night. Once he gets into the swing of it he starts to enjoy it and it can go on for quite a time.
I sleep lightly. The missis (who sleeps like the proverbial log) is getting peed off with it. We'd let it pass in the hopes that the feathered one will eventually lose his voice or pop his clogs.
But there's now an issue with our 16yr old son who is approaching crucial exams next week. He sleeps like a dead man but it's even getting through to him.
The plan is to have a quiet word with the neighbours, who are OK types, but I'm not sure what they'll be able to do short of getting rid of the thing. If things get sticky, what's the score from a legal/community perspective?
I was under the impression that you don't actually need a cock these days? But enough about my sex life, badum tish etc.

Shaw Tarse

31,836 posts

226 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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Sunday lunch is sorted wink

singlecoil

35,760 posts

269 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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Not your problem what they need to do to shut it up, it's theirs. They may not see it that way of course, in which case they will need some encouragement. Are you actually in a rural area, where such noise might be expected?

Seems liekly that they will already know aboiut the problem, but until you say something they will just say "well, no-one's complained yet"

tonym911

Original Poster:

18,936 posts

228 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
Can they who must not be named be eaten, then? Is that a spatchcock?

tonym911

Original Poster:

18,936 posts

228 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
singlecoil said:
Are you actually in a rural area, where such noise might be expected?
We're on the outskirts of a town up an unadopted dead-end road. The 'rooster' lives in the big grange house at the end of the road and there are four other houses at this end of that road (including ours). Quiet, but not not what I'd call rural.

Mobile Chicane

21,791 posts

235 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
As said, they may well not realise anyone's bothered by it.

The simplest way to reduce the crowing is to put the roster in a low cage where it can stand up, but not extend its neck to crow.

Blacking out the coop entirely will also help, but may not if it's crowing all night anyway. Could a street light or something be setting it off?

Worth keeping on good terms with them - free eggs.

If none of this helps, then contact the local council's environmental health department, just as you would for a continually barking dog or rowdy parties.

littleredrooster

6,137 posts

219 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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Hello. Did someone mention my name? What have I done now? smile

Jasandjules

71,911 posts

252 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
OP go have a quick word with them, nice and polite, and see what they say. Then you can decide how to proceed (IME most people who get a rooster get rid of it within six months because the f***rs won't shut up).

0a

24,062 posts

217 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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As above do the English middle class thing and explain how you're terribly sorry etc etc but it's disturbing your son, seems a fair enough complaint to me.

evilmunkey

1,377 posts

182 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
you can always call the local council, pest control / noise nuisance dept. it will then be assigned to the area noise and environment protection section for your area (sometimes called the n.e.p. team). an officer will be assigned to investigate and deal with this on your behalf.... i work for leeds council and take these kinds of reports... amazing how effective a letter from the local enforcement team can be. if it then carries on control orders can be put in place. what you will need to do also is to keep a diary, dates times , duration etc. this can be then used as evidence. your local council website should have a pdf download of the noise nuisance pack and diary.

evilmunkey

1,377 posts

182 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
you can always call the local council, pest control / noise nuisance dept. it will then be assigned to the area noise and environment protection section for your area (sometimes called the n.e.p. team). an officer will be assigned to investigate and deal with this on your behalf.... i work for leeds council and take these kinds of reports... amazing how effective a letter from the local enforcement team can be. if it then carries on control orders can be put in place. what you will need to do also is to keep a diary, dates times , duration etc. this can be then used as evidence. your local council website should have a pdf download of the noise nuisance pack and diary.

tonym911

Original Poster:

18,936 posts

228 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
Thanks to all for all the good advice. We get on fine with the neighbours and do get the free eggs every now and then, we're a good way off calling in the council, but in a way it's because we get on with them that it's hard to broach the subject. I'm surprised they haven't considered the neighbours a bit more tbh, they must hear the fella going off themselves.

evilmunkey

1,377 posts

182 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
sorry for the double post .. bloody laptop and sky interwebbage.. to be honest a word in the lughole of the offending party is often the best solution. but what i will say is that no complainants details would be revealed as its against the disclosure of personal info laws. if it doesnt get sorted . give the council a bell matey

Mobile Chicane

21,791 posts

235 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
quotequote all
tonym911 said:
Thanks to all for all the good advice. We get on fine with the neighbours and do get the free eggs every now and then, we're a good way off calling in the council, but in a way it's because we get on with them that it's hard to broach the subject. I'm surprised they haven't considered the neighbours a bit more tbh, they must hear the fella going off themselves.
You'd be surprised.

I sleep like the dead and don't hear my neighbours' cockerel at all. If only!

They'd put in place the measures I've suggested because other neighbours complained.

Who me ?

7,455 posts

235 months

Thursday 19th January 2012
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Suggest to owners that your dog has disturbewd a fox or two recently ,and that perhaps it's cock that's attracting it - might be an idea to keep cock inside for some time ,before fox has cock sans wine .

UnderTheRadar

503 posts

196 months

Friday 20th January 2012
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They are astonishingly loud things that can drown out a conversation at 30m and they start as soon as there is a glimmer of dawn. Our two started at 5am in the summer and woke me. We keep them inside the shed (large with windows) until at least 8am which reduces the noise a lot and our neighbour is fine with this but we've said if it's not fine then the cockerels go. They only crow in the night if something disturbs them - do you have foxes around you? I would have a quiet word and ask them to keep them in until a respectable hour.

ETA: Apologies "Who Me?" - just realised I've repeated a lot of what you said. smile


Edited by UnderTheRadar on Friday 20th January 08:29

tonym911

Original Poster:

18,936 posts

228 months

Friday 20th January 2012
quotequote all
Yep there are foxes around here, including one described by the OH as the biggest one in Wiltshire. That might explain the random timings of Mr Cockerel kicking off. He's been quiet the last couple of nights, either that or I'm too knackered from previous nights to hear him.