So exciting, and such an impressive hatch for the memory books.Two keets hatched yesterday so we have ONE egg left!!!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
So exciting, and such an impressive hatch for the memory books.Two keets hatched yesterday so we have ONE egg left!!!
DD fell in love with our cockerels and also has a breeding project, so we have a rooster bachelor pad! Now we have a new set of cockerels that we are supposed to butcher in a few weeks, but DD has been making friends with them... Apparently these new cockerels are “very good boys who just hang out near their tractor and don’t cause trouble”. Sigh.That is awesome! But, I guess it also disproves the theory of hatching more females with cooler temps. I'm hoping ours is a pullet, but I'm not holding my breath. Our 2 Polish, and NN, have all started crowing over the past few weeks. At least one of my 7 week old silkies is most assuredly also a cockerel. I will soon need to build a coop for wayward boys.
The keet seems fine, was very active when hatched then settled down to rest. I’m glad the next hatched soon after so he has a little buddy; these newly hatched keets are so TINY next to our older hatched keets, though we’ve been making an effort to sell the oldest and kept the youngest. Fortunately, constantly adding new keets seems to have trained our crew to expect that. They hear the cheeping of the new keets in the brooder box and go check it out. They aren’t gentle with the new keets, who think they are mom and try to run under the older keets’ legs, but the older keets aren’t deliberately harsh either. One of the new keets looks like it might be our highly sought after coral blue!!!Looks fine to me! It was probably just in the shell a bit longer and left behind more waste than you're accustomed to seeing.
Finally down to the last egg! So exciting!!!!
Memory books indeed!!! My hope is that we never replicate this particular hatching experience! I have a study going on and need to be at work early, and keets keep hatching in wee hours of the night! At 1 AM last night I was like, “Okay little guy, you’ve zipped enough! Let’s get you out so I can go to bed.” And that one was (possibly) the hoped for coral blue!!!So exciting, and such an impressive hatch for the memory books.
The keet seems fine, was very active when hatched then settled down to rest. I’m glad the next hatched soon after so he has a little buddy; these newly hatched keets are so TINY next to our older hatched keets, though we’ve been making an effort to sell the oldest and kept the youngest. Fortunately, constantly adding new keets seems to have trained our crew to expect that. They hear the cheeping of the new keets in the brooder box and go check it out. They aren’t gentle with the new keets, who think they are mom and try to run under the older keets’ legs, but the older keets aren’t deliberately harsh either. One of the new keets looks like it might be our highly sought after coral blue!!!
Seriously! I’ve been waking up all night and checking my phone for humiditiy spikes, then going downstairs to check the incubator... I won’t know what to do with myself when I don’t have something about to hatch at any time!!!I can't wait to see pictures of the hopefully coral blue keet! I've learned so much about all the lovely colors available in guineas since you've had this long hatch! lol, I hope you can get back to a normal sleep pattern easily after this. lol, It's been so long I wouldn't be surprised if you wake up thinking you need to check the incubator.![]()
Seriously! I’ve been waking up all night and checking my phone for humiditiy spikes, then going downstairs to check the incubator... I won’t know what to do with myself when I don’t have something about to hatch at any time!!!
I’ll try to get some decent keet pics, but here’s a picture of Mouse, the pale guinea on the lowest branch. There is a lavender guinea in the tree too. Coral blue and lavender share the same lavender base color, but the blues have a decrease in pearling or spotting, which is a subtle difference and hard to see in this picture. The two guineas together are again Mouse, the coral blue, with Concord, the purple pied. Concord is still sitting on the nest in the coop, with the old eggs that I gave her! Concord or our other purple, Welch, would be the mom if we do indeed have a coral blue keet, as purple is the wild type base color with the decreased pearling gene. Mouse was our only coral blue and was sadly eaten by a bobcat at the beginning of the summer, before these eggs were set. The pic of the guinea alone is my only male so the dad to all of these keets. Ghost is a lavender with normal pearling or spots.
DD fell in love with our cockerels and also has a breeding project, so we have a rooster bachelor pad! Now we have a new set of cockerels that we are supposed to butcher in a few weeks, but DD has been making friends with them... Apparently these new cockerels are “very good boys who just hang out near their tractor and don’t cause trouble”. Sigh.
Yeah he’s really quite impressive! It would be no big deal for a rooster to take care of his 7 ladies, but guineas naturally pair bond, so forming a larger harem like this for non-confined birds is a little unusual, I think!Love the colors!! That's one busy daddy. Lol, He sure does make his rounds to fertilize all those eggs you've hatched!
Thanks! There were things that I wish I’d done differently but was mostly pretty happy with the bachelor pad. That was DD’s present for last Christmas! You are trying to rehome the heritage birds but slaughter (I’m assuming) your meat cockerels? Our cockerels have just started crowing - they are so funny with that pitiful, strangled sound that they make!!!Omg I love your bachelor pad. What a gorgeous setup, and so secure!!!!
I have more cockerels right now than I have ever had. I think there’s six or seven crowing at least. Including a 7 week old Cornish that walked right up to me and crowed in my face this morning. I just rolled my eyes. 7. Weeks.
No mature crows, they’re all meat birds or 12-14 weeks old heritage. Ugh I need to put out some ads.