Thanks! That’s our chicken and duck coop. The guineas used to be in a 8x6 fenced off section of it, but it was too small, so we built a 8 x 16 cattle panel hoop coop last fall. I currently have a temporary run that’s electric poultry net with a 1x1” nylon cover (pics attached). I’m using the run to train guineas to the new coop, and to combine them to lay their eggs there. What do you use your run for?
Nice size!!! Love your Guineas! The way they look at you - I recognize that Guinea-presence anywhere.
I use our run to keep them safe from predators when I cannot watch them on the free range. Also, we have a couple of generations of flock members now and they take years to mingle peacefully, so the run now has two sub-pens in the protected space that house 2 sets of "babies".
Used to use the run, like you said, to get them used to their home and to keep them safe. My idea was for them to free-range from dawn to dusk but that has not worked out in reality because of the predators. We even got a very expensive fence and 2 Maremmas to guard the birds but it still has not worked out: the dogs only guard the birds when I am out with them, otherwise they find a sleeping spot and abandon the flock at the edge of the woods.
Too bad for the poor Guineas who are now locked up too much, but alive at least! Wish I had a bigger run now and working on expanding this one, but it is a lot of work and I have little time at the moment. Safety is still my number one concern for them, next to food, water, calcium, grit, and some space to not be harassed and to nest. And a clean environment, of course. I scrape the platforms and roosting bars daily and it works out ok.
They do free range almost every day for a few hours and come home willingly (minus a few arguments and a lost bird over the property fence that I have to retrieve with lots of effort every blue moon) for millet and mealworms. =] I keep them in when it is very bad weather or I am just too busy and tired to make it. The run is essential for space and dust bathing and fresh air and sunshine. Also great for the odd vacation we go on (not since 2014), when we have a pet sitter to take care of everyone. Then they do not free range at all for a week.
Adam, sorry, don't want to derail your post - maybe you get some good impressions and ideas from this conversation, though - what a run is good for and what may happen in the next couple of years if you stick with keeping a flock. There may be days you are gone (on vacation or business travel), there may be chicks you want to keep or new birds you want to introduce. All those things require some planning and space. A safe and big enough run is awesome to help out in those situations. Some work up front can save you a lot of trouble and heart-ache later. Just some ideas.
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