Tevian
Chirping
- Sep 12, 2022
- 49
- 103
- 74
I’ve tried for a couple of years now to hatch my own guineas. Incubator, under chickens, or letting the Guinea hens actually sit on their clutches (when they choose a safe spot, which… doesn’t seem to be often), and every time my success is abysmal. I have successfully raised a grand total of three to adulthood. Out of about 25-30 that have hatched.
When I put them in the incubator they stop developing halfway through, or the one or two that do hatch then die a day or two later. My most successful incubator hatch left me with 80% of the keets with spraddle leg, before I put non slip lining in it, so I had to euthanise them. (I know spraddle leg can be treatable but I have very poor hand dexterity so it wasn’t feasible). I know my incubator works fine cause I hatch chickens no problem.
One of my Wyandotte hens has been way more successful than me, she has raised the three to adulthood. But she is no longer laying or going broody and tbh I think she’s sick of the Guineas.
My Guinea hens are, if possible, worse than I am. I had one try to nest on flat ground out in the open on my driveway once. One nested in the cattle grid and all her eggs got drowned in a storm. Their eggs get eaten by goannas. Stomped by cows. Found by the dogs before I even know anyones sitting. Two hens have hatched chicks; one squashed all her chicks, and the other vanished presumed eaten along with all her babies.
At this point I only have one hen left, and 8 males. I had a flock of 14 at one point. Terrible things seem to happen to them. I do plan to buy more but I’d like to have semi self-sustaining population. They keep the snakes and ticks away so effectively.
Everyone else seems to breed them so easily, are you guys magic? What spells do I need to cast to appease the Guinea gods lol.
Any tips/tricks/advice??? TIA
When I put them in the incubator they stop developing halfway through, or the one or two that do hatch then die a day or two later. My most successful incubator hatch left me with 80% of the keets with spraddle leg, before I put non slip lining in it, so I had to euthanise them. (I know spraddle leg can be treatable but I have very poor hand dexterity so it wasn’t feasible). I know my incubator works fine cause I hatch chickens no problem.
One of my Wyandotte hens has been way more successful than me, she has raised the three to adulthood. But she is no longer laying or going broody and tbh I think she’s sick of the Guineas.
My Guinea hens are, if possible, worse than I am. I had one try to nest on flat ground out in the open on my driveway once. One nested in the cattle grid and all her eggs got drowned in a storm. Their eggs get eaten by goannas. Stomped by cows. Found by the dogs before I even know anyones sitting. Two hens have hatched chicks; one squashed all her chicks, and the other vanished presumed eaten along with all her babies.
At this point I only have one hen left, and 8 males. I had a flock of 14 at one point. Terrible things seem to happen to them. I do plan to buy more but I’d like to have semi self-sustaining population. They keep the snakes and ticks away so effectively.
Everyone else seems to breed them so easily, are you guys magic? What spells do I need to cast to appease the Guinea gods lol.
Any tips/tricks/advice??? TIA