You have a Pied Pearl Gray male and can expect him to pass his one white gene to half of his offspring if you have a large enough sample size. It only takes one white gene to create a pied guinea. What you can't expect is to get any white keets since you don't have any other white genes in your flock other than your pied male.I have a genetics/color question for all you Guinea experts. I went to lock my Guineas in the coop tonight and saw that my two hens (who are sitting on about 30 eggs together in the same nesting box) had hatched 5 keets so far. The keets are as follows: 2 are pearl gray, 1 is buff dundotte, and 2 are pearl pied. The potential parents are as follows: one hen is a pearl gray and the other is a buff dundotte. I only have 2 males. The older dominate male is a pied pearl gray and the younger male is a light lavender. (By the way, I have no white Guineas in my whole flock). I thought that the only way to get a pied pearl Guinea was to cross a white with a pearl gray. Is this correct, and if so, can someone explain how I got the pied keets?