I've enjoyed reading all the experiences with guineas. They are one of my favorite birds. I had guineas in south FL until just before I moved my fowl to GA in the summer of '08. Predators finally cleaned out the last one just before the move. I started my FL guinea flock with eggs and my hen only hatched 5 of the 12 eggs I had shipped in from Texas. For the longest time I had only 3 adult males left from those 5 keats. They were the comics of my chicken yard, providing more entertainment than the entire flock of chickens, which were at times, up to about 150 gamefowl. The interresting thing is that the 3 of them were like a roving street gang. They would gang up on any unpenned rooster and beat him mercilessly. Like I said, predators finally finished them off.
Here in GA, I started with 20 keats in the summer of 2009. They roamed near and far and the distant neighbors enjoyed seeing them. Unfortunately, by spring of 2010, I was down to 3 again. The three seemed a lot smarter than any of the others and I still have them. Every time the remaining hen starts a nest, something destroys it. I recently turned a trio of chickens loose with them and they get along fabulously. They all roost together in the rafters of my pole barn. I have to scrape the concrete floor every morning, but at least the birds are safe from owlls and such and are out of the weather on stormy nights. I love these guineas and if I can resque some eggs this spring, I'll let a hen hatch some new keats.
Sure they are noisey, and sure they roam, but they don`t tear up the yard and beds like chickens, and being deep in the woods, I have noticed a remarkable decline in bugs of all kinds. I was inundated with ticks, spiders, and scorpions, but the population has become much more manageable, and besides, I have glue traps all through the house, and I haven't caught a mouse in at least a year. Gotta get more guineas.........Pop