10 Farm Animal Habits That’ll Make You Question Everything
Raising animals is rewarding—but some of their behavior will leave you staring into the distance, wondering what on earth you got yourself into. These habits are weird, frustrating, or downright disgusting, and nobody prepares you for them.
Chickens Eat Each Other’s Eggs

It starts with a crack, then full-blown egg-eating chaos. Once they get a taste, it’s hard to break. You’ll rethink everything while watching them devour what you were planning to eat for breakfast.
Goats Escape for Sport

They’re like hairy little Houdinis. They’ll climb, crawl, or flatten themselves like pancakes to get out. And once they know how, they’ll keep doing it.
Pigs Destroy Everything

They root, dig, and flip over water troughs for fun. That pig pen you built? It’s temporary. They’ll tear through it like it’s made of paper.
Sheep Will Die Over Nothing

They’ll get stuck in a fence, bloat from a new pasture, or panic into a heart attack. Sometimes it feels like they wake up looking for a way to die.
Ducks Poop in Their Own Water

They’ll foul up their clean drinking water within minutes. Then they’ll swim in it and act like nothing’s wrong. It’s gross, and it never stops.
Roosters Attack Like They Own the Place

Even if you raised them from a chick, some roosters snap. They’ll come at your shins like you owe them money. Good boots are a must.
Cows Break Stuff Without Meaning To

They’re huge and surprisingly clumsy. They’ll rub on fences until they break, lean on gates until they bend, and knock over anything left in the pasture.
Rabbits Chew Through Everything

Wires, wood, plastic—they’ll chew it all. If it’s not out of reach, it’s fair game. Don’t leave anything valuable within bunny height.
Turkeys Are Dumb in Shocking Ways

They’ll drown in the rain, stare at a wall for hours, or get stuck on the wrong side of a fence they walked through earlier. You’ll question evolution daily.
They’ll Eat Things They Shouldn’t

Screws, plastic bags, gloves—it doesn’t matter. If it hits the ground, there’s a good chance one of your animals will try to eat it before you can stop them.
*This article was developed with AI-powered tools and has been carefully reviewed by our editors.
