Someone dropped (abandoned) a young Bantam rooster a couple years back here on our rural road in the heat of summer. I fed him on the road, left water for him. I tried to catch him. He could fly as well as any forest grouse. I tried everything. If I tried a smelt net he'd fly off deep into the cornfields. He would be gone for many days and I would give up hope and figured a predator got him. Plenty of birds of prey here. Yet, he somehow kept showing up alive!
He eventually sort of moved in close to the food source-me ! He was near the garage safely, and avoiding the cats. He is tiny. About the size of a small a pigeon.
2 plus months trying before I finally caught him in late Fall with bad weather coming. He got stuck on my windshield wiper of my car with his spurs. He used to hop on the car and then fly to his favorite night perch.
Now, a couple years later, he is still here. He comes in every night in his nice size cage and spends his days in a large covered safety pen with doghouse and heat lamp. I feed him all sorts of vegetable treats. His favorite snack has turned out to be oatmeal cookies! He cackles with joy when I crumble some up.
Like others have said, they can have great personalities. This one is one tough bastard. He lives to attack me. He will fly to my arm if I slap on it. Like a falcon to a handler. He then bites me. I like his tenacity! He is a feather molting machine. Look at his spurs !!! Before I found he would fly up to me he nailed me with those sharp spurs when I would corner him. He is a little more docile..barely. Trimming his beak is getting easier.
I have tried to re-home him with no luck yet. If I cannot by late Spring I will give in and get some hens and let him live his life out.
Have not eaten chicken in 2 1/2 years since his arrival and may not again-although I never cared too much for it anyway.

Above: Spurs !!!
Below: his Jungle months, free
Below: Imprisoned and calling me out, or into his pen to battle
