I finally got a good count of my guineas. It turns out that I still have 41. I started with 41 young birds and 5 older birds...so I've lost a total of 5. One escaped from my hands when I was trying to move them from the hatcher into the barn and it just ran away. One drowned in the waterer because I had my dad water them while I was out of town and he forgot to put the top back on. One was a runt with bad legs that a hawk got. So...really I've only lost two others. I remember the night that 10 slept out on the power line going to the barn. There was another one that ran off into the woods that I couldn't catch. I'll bet that's one of the two. There was another instance when a bunch tried to roost on the step-perches that I had built going up to the loft. When I herded them into the barn one seemed to "disappear". I thought that either it had already run into the barn or flown up to the loft but it might have run off into the bamboo, the woods, or the blueberries and then been taken that night by predators. Either way, I have far more than I thought and so have lost far fewer than I thought. I've had them do a fair job of roosting in the barn at night as long as I round them up and herd them in the right direction. It might not actually be necessary but they sure seem clueless as the sun starts to set. I still have a few birds that don't like to leave the barn (all but one are the Jumbo/French that stay in there). It really seems like maybe the Jumbo/French might have had some of their natural guinea sense bread out of them since they are the ones that run off when they are startled and don't seem to call out to re-join the flock. They seem more likely to stay in the barn. They definitely are slower to roost but that might be because they don't fly very well and really seem to struggle to get up there. It will be interesting to see if their differences become more or less pronounced as they mature.