Guinea hens won't go into coop...

They go into coop every night right now so I guess it's time to figuring out best way to train them to free roam...
 
My technique for that was to let them out for about and hour or two, before dusk, and supervising them. I did that for a few days extending the time. But I always herded them back into the coop at the same time - dusk - so they continued with the idea that the coop is where they roost for the night. Guineas are creatures of routine, and where they roost is important to them on an instinctive level. Using that will help you

It's a good idea in the beginning to learn to use herding sticks. They work if you use them properly - disasters if you don't. Couple of rules: 1) Never, ever touch the guineas with the sticks. Scares them silly and they scatter, which is not the point. 2) the more slowly you move around guineas with the herding sticks, the better off you are. Otherwise it scares them silly and they scatter, which is not the point. 3) Start with a helper or two until you get the hang of it. Otherwise you end up chasing them with long sticks and you guessed it, it scares them silly and.....

When herding, you don't have to herd all in the group at one time. If there are stragglers, they'll catch up. Concentrate on herding half, or a third of the flock at first.

Herding sticks take about 2 or 3 sessions for the human to learn to use them. They're just extensions of your arms. I use six foot very thin strips of scrap wood, and hold them out in front of me, low to the ground. I move very slowly, and never insist on a "straight line" for the guineas. As long as they're moving in the right direction, I'm fine. I try to stay beside or behind them. The time will come sooner rather than later when you'll go out with your sticks and they'll already be in the coop.

If you haven't been using treats as bribes, start now :). When they go to the roost, give them treats and repeat the same sound at the same time. It can be words, like "time for treats", or shaking the feed bucket, a whistle, whatever, just be consistent with it, and all you'll have to do is make the sound and they'll come running. Make sure they're IN the coop before you give the treat. (Personal learning experience. LOL).

Sufficiently "homed" guineas will take about a week to train to come back to the coop at dusk. Good luck!
 
After I posted my response, I found this from PeepsCA in an earlier thread, so I'm copying it for you. Hope you don't mind Peeps.

"When I am coop training a new flock of Guineas, I keep them confined to their coop/pen for a full 6 wks, consistently feed them treats each night at what the normal coop-up time would be for them (and from day 1 I always use a specific food call when I feed them and give them treats so they associate that call with yummies). I make sure they always get treats once they are in, and they start looking fwd to this. It also helps to have an attached covered run on the coop so you can work on the routine of herding them into the coop each evening during those 6 wks while they are contained and have nowhere to go and no choice but to go in. When I start letting them out I close up the coop/pen while they are out, so they cannot come and go as they please and they have no free choice to feed all day, so foraging is encouraged (they have a water source outside tho). And I give them no choice about getting up in the trees in the evenings, I make sure to get them in before it starts getting dark (when they'd normally start heading for the trees), and they always get treats when they come in. Occasionally I get a stubborn bird or 2 but I use whatever means necessary to get the bird down and into the coop... broom, long piece of PVC pipe, I've even climbed up and pushed a bird off a limb, lol. The key is to make a nightly coop-up routine for them right from the start that you stick with so they stick with it as well, and just don't let them make one of their own..."
 
I found out that my pair of pearl guineas will do anything for cracked corn. Come down from a tree. Cross the yard. Flap over a fence. March into the "night pen". They are free range the rest of the time. I have a long PVC pole if they need a little encouragement, but so far they havent. I brooded them with the chicks, so maybe that helped. Habit, not thought probably.
 
Do you guys recommending letting a couple out at first or all of them? Is cracked corn ok for them? I have bee using millet they like but don't go nuts.... The checkens are always penned up next door they seem to like to stay around them.....
 
They do learn by repetition but not always, so putting them in the coop each night paid off in your case. New changes usually results in some pretty stubborn or confused Guineas tho, lol.

Congrats, glad they figured it out.
 

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