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NinjaGamer2022
Songster
- Apr 30, 2022
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Is within a month to get more keets too late? They look very young, 2 out of the 3 have no feathers, the last one does. Is there anyway we could slowly introduce them if we had too? We might be able to get more this week but I don't think enough to make 10. Thank you for your input.Ok, so, my guineas ARE guineas. They're just MY guineas. (@R2elk -)
As for how many and adding to, if you're going to add to, do. it. now. Otherwise you'll more than likely end up with small flocks that have nothing to do w/each other except fighting.
Breeding is a lesson for next year. You have babies.
They can be sociable..if you have that much time to dedicate to it. I've spent a lot of time just quietly sitting next to the brooder, then hand feeding as R2elk said. Itty bitties that will fit in a fuzzy footie sock have spent time snuggled in my hand. I also find things big enough, like a crocheted hat or, my favorite, an old quilted toaster cover of my grandmother's that can fit the entire brood to sit safely in my lap.
Put your hand flat in the brooder and let them perch on it.
With my first, a group of 7, we used a hexagon collapsable covered kennel that I would take them outside and sit in with them, leaving the brooder on the porch after cleaning. They learned to fly back to the brooder on their own when I opened the kennel door.
Once they were old enough to free range, I sat out there for hours with them, hand feeding, talking,mimicking.
At first I took the advice to have them in a quiet area. Then I started keeping the brooder out in the living room so they grew accustomed to dogs, tvs, humans, babies, and a robot vacuum. They know MY dogs aren't a threat. They still raise the roof if they see a coyote or the neighbor's cocker spaniel crosses the borderline.
There is a huge difference between the ones I raised and ones raised by the hen.I kept one raised by the hen. Just shy of being a yr old, he's getting used to me petting him on the perch, recognizes/responds to his name, but still won't eat out of my hand even though he sees everyone else doing it.
To the extreme, I had a single late hatch who has lived inside w/us all winter, she's 6 months old and about to be introduced to the new coop we just finished today.
Ok... she maaay not think she's a guinea...she likes to be "brushed out" with a toothbrush, snuggle and cuddle on the sofa, goes to sleep with her beak resting anywhere on me- hand, shoulder, cheek. She doesn't care for the jumbos outside and that's probably a good thing. She's getting roommates at the end of the month. I guess I'll have to put a sofa in her coop so we can have cuddle time, bc she kind of demands it every evening and gets irate if she sees the dogs and me laying down w/o her.yeah, I'm going to miss her being inside. But she was an extreme- a horrible incubation hatch rate, lone survivor, and nothing was going to jeopardize her survival. And she's so stinkin cute!View attachment 3090163
P.S. She's very cute. Did you potty train her? She's beautiful.