I've been doing some reading on guineas and read the thread on Guineas 101. I definitely want guineas here but my partner isn't convinced yet.
We have 20 acres of land. Beyond that, it's old logging property and national forest. According to FWP, we have every single predator that lives in Montana, living in our area. We haven't seen any of them though - the only predators we see are bears. We have coyotes, opossums, raccoons, skunks, weasels, foxes, mountain lions, bears, and supposedly wolves too.
Would the guineas be "smart" enough to stay alive if they free range during the day outside the confines of our electric fence? We do have an English Shepherd that helps with predator control / alerts us to predators (and everything else he thinks shouldn't be on the property, including deer
).
Last year we had tons of grasshoppers and they went after our rhubarb plants so we set the chickens after them and they ate the grasshoppers but then completely ate our rhubarb plants! (Aren't these supposed to be poisonous?) We also have way too many stink bugs/west conifer beetles.
If the guineas will go after the stink bugs, that alone will probably sell my partner.
Last fall when they started to come inside for the winter, it wasn't uncommon to find over 50 stink bugs on the windows and walls in just one room, in a day. The next day, there'd be more. And so on.
If the guineas generally are smart enough to stay alive when free ranging during the day, how many would be suffice for 20 acres? There is no pasture, it all is wooded.
We have 20 acres of land. Beyond that, it's old logging property and national forest. According to FWP, we have every single predator that lives in Montana, living in our area. We haven't seen any of them though - the only predators we see are bears. We have coyotes, opossums, raccoons, skunks, weasels, foxes, mountain lions, bears, and supposedly wolves too.
Would the guineas be "smart" enough to stay alive if they free range during the day outside the confines of our electric fence? We do have an English Shepherd that helps with predator control / alerts us to predators (and everything else he thinks shouldn't be on the property, including deer

Last year we had tons of grasshoppers and they went after our rhubarb plants so we set the chickens after them and they ate the grasshoppers but then completely ate our rhubarb plants! (Aren't these supposed to be poisonous?) We also have way too many stink bugs/west conifer beetles.
If the guineas will go after the stink bugs, that alone will probably sell my partner.

If the guineas generally are smart enough to stay alive when free ranging during the day, how many would be suffice for 20 acres? There is no pasture, it all is wooded.