Hi!
This past October, after moving to the new home with a empty chicken coop, I bought several
heritage pullets and guinea babies. I had read that you can raise them together so I did. The article forgot to say that at the same time the guinea males could cause trouble with the hens and would attack my roosters and create havoc in my coop. I separated the 4 guineas, turned out I had two males and two females. They have now been in the separate cage for more than a month. Do you think they might have bonded with one another? If I set them free, should I do it at sun set so they see how cool it is to sleep in the trees? They've done that before when they were younger. I don't want them to roost with the chickens. I don't want them to interfere with my hens. Maybe I should just cook them for dinner and start fresh? The only reason I got them was for bug control, warning of predators, and for their delicious meat. Any advice is welcome. Thank you. Newbie in the block.
Natalia
This past October, after moving to the new home with a empty chicken coop, I bought several
heritage pullets and guinea babies. I had read that you can raise them together so I did. The article forgot to say that at the same time the guinea males could cause trouble with the hens and would attack my roosters and create havoc in my coop. I separated the 4 guineas, turned out I had two males and two females. They have now been in the separate cage for more than a month. Do you think they might have bonded with one another? If I set them free, should I do it at sun set so they see how cool it is to sleep in the trees? They've done that before when they were younger. I don't want them to roost with the chickens. I don't want them to interfere with my hens. Maybe I should just cook them for dinner and start fresh? The only reason I got them was for bug control, warning of predators, and for their delicious meat. Any advice is welcome. Thank you. Newbie in the block.
Natalia