I
I forgot to mention mine are 3 months old.
You may be able to get a bit more for them than $5 each, considering that someone doesn't have to keep them in a brooder or under a heat lamp anymore since they are older and feathered out.
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I
I forgot to mention mine are 3 months old.
I noticed the old guinea thread had kind of finished so i thought I would make a new one.
If you are not permitted to have roosters, it is very unlikely that it will be okay to have guineas since they are much louder than a rooster is.I have been reading that guinea hens will help alert my chickens when danger is near, primarily birds of prey, common in my area.
My yard is not zoned to have roosters, and my chickens are in a covered run majority of the day, but I'd like to let them free range in the yard the last couple hours of the day.
Last night, a hawk was in our tree, scoping out my chickens, and my neighbors chickens.
First, do Guinea hens truly work to protect the flock in this way?
If so, can one intermingle with my chickens, will they coop all together?
Thank you for the feedback. I can check to see if they are allowed since roosters or not, but regardless, sounds like they might be in effective for what I am looking for.
Do you have any other suggestions on how to keep the birds of prey at bay? I do have a large Ron that is fully covered on top and sides. I also have a small chicken tractor, so I may just need to count on being outside when they are free ranging.
This is just one item that has been mentioned in another forum.
https://reedjoseph.com/products/pyrotechnics/
Seriously? I have seen loud firecrackers used on commercial vineyards in an auto loader/detonator, but I'm just a backyard chicken owner, pretty sure constant detonations would be more annoying to me and my neighbors, then a rooster or Guinea hens.
Short from installing a circus tent, I guess my chickens will free range when I can be constantly present with them... Which is not necessarily a bad thing.
I only have Guineas, no chickens. I can say that Guineas do alarm loudly when there is a predator or others danger present. However, sometimes they stand up to predators as a big gang, thereby getting themselves eaten. The males seem to get picked off more than the hens since they try to protect the rest of the flock. I see an occasional hawk or eagle fly over my place but my main predators this year has been fox and coyote. I have started leaving a radio on outside of my coop during the day. I generally try to keep it tuned to talk radio or something with more talk than music. This seems to have helped quite a bit and I have not lost any further birds since doing this. Not sure if it will work with Hawks, but it might be worth a try!
Very interesting... I will have to be careful to pick the right talk radio show so my birds don't get too opinionated one way or the other.Ha ha Ha
Is the talk radio intended for fox and coyote, or for birds of prey as well?