The newest addition to the world:

This little guy hatched from under my broody sultan just within the last hour. If you recall, my sultan chose to brood in a straw bale up under my deck, between two rafters. I had to lift a deck board just to be able to check on her, but as she is right outside our back door, I could hear her clucking softly to the chick the second I stepped outside. I poked the camera down into the gap where the deckboard normally sits and snapped, sight unseen a few times, hoping to get one shot that actually showed the chick. Now the hard part - waiting until the other two have either hatched or been determined duds, and then get her and the chick safely to ground level.
Pikeman - my hat is off to you - sounds like you've been super productive.
Hawkeye - I haven't heard anything lately about your brother's coop - it must be about finished by now? Also, what happened with those sash windows you bought awhile back and were going to be cleaning up?
Danz - the guineas are growing like crazy - I am so glad to have them. I need to get them moved out to my outdoor brooder soon. I had a batch of chicks in that but moved them to the garden area yesterday, to open up the brooder for the guineas and muscovies. But now I'm thinking I'd like to put the broody and her chicks there for a couple of days after I've moved them from the straw bale nest. The sultan is low on the pecking order and I'm afraid her status will prevent her keeping the chicks safe from the rest of the flock. My last broody was close to the head of the flock and none of them dared to mess with her chicks.
At what age can you start to tell gender in guineas? Isn't it funny how poults, keets and chicks all start out looking like chicks and then grow up to look so different from one another? I've noticed the keets stand a lot more vertical than chicks ever do, and I love their two-toned peep - so different from a chicken peep.
This little guy hatched from under my broody sultan just within the last hour. If you recall, my sultan chose to brood in a straw bale up under my deck, between two rafters. I had to lift a deck board just to be able to check on her, but as she is right outside our back door, I could hear her clucking softly to the chick the second I stepped outside. I poked the camera down into the gap where the deckboard normally sits and snapped, sight unseen a few times, hoping to get one shot that actually showed the chick. Now the hard part - waiting until the other two have either hatched or been determined duds, and then get her and the chick safely to ground level.
Pikeman - my hat is off to you - sounds like you've been super productive.
Hawkeye - I haven't heard anything lately about your brother's coop - it must be about finished by now? Also, what happened with those sash windows you bought awhile back and were going to be cleaning up?
Danz - the guineas are growing like crazy - I am so glad to have them. I need to get them moved out to my outdoor brooder soon. I had a batch of chicks in that but moved them to the garden area yesterday, to open up the brooder for the guineas and muscovies. But now I'm thinking I'd like to put the broody and her chicks there for a couple of days after I've moved them from the straw bale nest. The sultan is low on the pecking order and I'm afraid her status will prevent her keeping the chicks safe from the rest of the flock. My last broody was close to the head of the flock and none of them dared to mess with her chicks.
At what age can you start to tell gender in guineas? Isn't it funny how poults, keets and chicks all start out looking like chicks and then grow up to look so different from one another? I've noticed the keets stand a lot more vertical than chicks ever do, and I love their two-toned peep - so different from a chicken peep.