I think the keets will be fine without an adult role model. I started my flock with 4 keets (with no adults) and they did just fine. In fact, 2 of those original ones are my best mothers today! Most Guinea qualities are inborn and come as instinct. I think the inherent "wildness" they have is what makes them so hard to tame, even if you handle them a lot as keets.This is why I was asking about whether we ought to buy an adult or two as guides for the keets about to be hatched here, but people said, and I think you said this too, that guineas don't take too well to keets not their own. But I totally know that the mother birds would be passing on important cultural knowledge to the keets and I'm concerned about starting a flock without that ability.
awww sweet. Yes, I don't actually intend to handle them like I do the chicks. I don't pick up chicks that fuss either, actually, let them decide they want to know me better. But I know keets/guineas tend to stay wild and I actually want them to be wild and wary and self-sufficient as much as possible.
Yes, I understand there will be some communal sharing one way or another even with separate houses. Added feeders and waterers when I added the new chicks, will add more when the guineas emerge, but that's now months down the line.For what its worth when i had poultry I housed the guineas separately from the chickens but free ranged them together. At the time I had five adult males at least four years old. So there was no "breeding" season commotion.
but there were scuffles over food and water and surprisingly they shared roosts occasionally. Yep I left the door open between them after a while.
I put the roosts up high for the guineas and most of the chickens stayed on the lower ones. But there were a few roos that were up to the challenge....
didnt feed in the coop at that time I fed out in the yard. so I setup about three or four feed stations and a couple of water founts so that when one ran everyone off they could go to another.
My success was dictated by not having Guinea Hens.... The social dynamic changes every spring. My last flock of guineas had females. I raised them from Keets so they all became sexually mature at the same time... Oh the running and the feather pulling they could even run along the perches....
but once they pair off life settles some.... and I hear they mellow a bit each year.... So far the coyotes have terminated that experience for me.
deb
Thank you very much for your thoughts, everyone.
--V