Raising Guinea Fowl 101

He is already hobbling on it. Gonna pull splint off and redo it tomorrow just to check to make sure there were no indentations in leg or loss of blood flow and check tendon. The hobble for splayed leg came off but his foot is flat on ground anyway. I just used it to draw leg forward. Doing good. Fingers crossed. Could go either way.

Let the old guys out into coop...meaning the cowards are still hanging in brooder. Not cool. Probably come out tomorrow morning and find them all out. Or not. One did come out but she is looking for the way back in.


Guineas are certainly freaky birds.....especially the younger ones! I remember the last time I had keets that were not hatched under a hen. When they first came out of the brooder, i could hardly get them to leave the coop. Once I got them outside, they hid in the tall grass and wouldn't move and refused to eat any bugs. It took several months to get them to act like normal free ranging Guineas (if you can ever really call Guineas "normal").
 
Guineas are certainly freaky birds.....especially the younger ones! I remember the last time I had keets that were not hatched under a hen. When they first came out of the brooder, i could hardly get them to leave the coop. Once I got them outside, they hid in the tall grass and wouldn't move and refused to eat any bugs. It took several months to get them to act like normal free ranging Guineas (if you can ever really call Guineas "normal").


Good thing you added that, I was going to ask you to define a "normal" guinea?


My keets being raised by the turkey hen (Ethel) have found they can fly. It is driving poor Ethel nuts. The babies are going all over and doing their thing. I am afraid if she does not lay the law down to them now they are all going to run off and join a criminal gang....
 
Good thing you added that, I was going to ask you to define a "normal" guinea?


My keets being raised by the turkey hen (Ethel) have found they can fly. It is driving poor Ethel nuts. The babies are going all over and doing their thing. I am afraid if she does not lay the law down to them now they are all going to run off and join a criminal gang....

My keets, now 2 weeks old, are starting to fly. We are moving them from the brooder space to an intermediate space either today or tomorrow. The new, intermediate space (until we get the big coop done) is a hoop-coop that is 7.5-ft by 12-ft (with 6-ft ceiling). I need some advice about how to set up the new space inside. Right now they have a "Mama-Heating-Pad" (MHP), which they were raised with, that is a cave-like construction of a piece of wire field fence, bent into a mound shape, and covered with the heating pad (now turned off and unplugged) and a towel on top. Most of the day they do not use the MHP anymore, but they try to sleep under still at night, even though they don't all fit under it any more. Also, one or another will scoot under it periodically during the day.

QUESTIONS:
1. what type of bedding etc should I give them in the new larger (intermediate) space? I know we should give them some little roosts to develop onto, but what can I do about their need to still be inside a dark, protected space all huddled together? I was thinking we would move their current brooder (ex-large wire dog crate-- 48x30") inside the new space (raised on bricks) and somehow convert the whole interior into some kind of "safe space".

2. I was thinking of using a clear tarp on top of the hoop coop (as opposed to a dark, solid tarp). I was thinking that since they like to roost in trees that the clear top might be nicer for them.

Here is a picture of the space. The back wall is in place, we will finish the front wall (with people door) today. It is 3 cattle panels bent into a 12-ft-long hoop-coop, all completely covered with hardware cloth. It gets direct sun in the morning but is shaded most of the day, dappled to dark shade. We'll put a waterproof tarp over 2/3 of the length, leaving 4-ft at the front to get weather and sky.
 
My keets, now 2 weeks old, are starting to fly. We are moving them from the brooder space to an intermediate space either today or tomorrow. The new, intermediate space (until we get the big coop done) is a hoop-coop that is 7.5-ft by 12-ft (with 6-ft ceiling). I need some advice about how to set up the new space inside. Right now they have a "Mama-Heating-Pad" (MHP), which they were raised with, that is a cave-like construction of a piece of wire field fence, bent into a mound shape, and covered with the heating pad (now turned off and unplugged) and a towel on top. Most of the day they do not use the MHP anymore, but they try to sleep under still at night, even though they don't all fit under it any more. Also, one or another will scoot under it periodically during the day.

QUESTIONS:
1. what type of bedding etc should I give them in the new larger (intermediate) space? I know we should give them some little roosts to develop onto, but what can I do about their need to still be inside a dark, protected space all huddled together? I was thinking we would move their current brooder (ex-large wire dog crate-- 48x30") inside the new space (raised on bricks) and somehow convert the whole interior into some kind of "safe space".

2. I was thinking of using a clear tarp on top of the hoop coop (as opposed to a dark, solid tarp). I was thinking that since they like to roost in trees that the clear top might be nicer for them.

Here is a picture of the space. The back wall is in place, we will finish the front wall (with people door) today. It is 3 cattle panels bent into a 12-ft-long hoop-coop, all completely covered with hardware cloth. It gets direct sun in the morning but is shaded most of the day, dappled to dark shade. We'll put a waterproof tarp over 2/3 of the length, leaving 4-ft at the front to get weather and sky.



All good question and I have no answers since I free range almost everything...


I would however paint vertical bars on the outside of the cage and give the keets little orange jumpsuits to wear. It makes them more comfortable when they are in their natural environment.
 
I have just found out preying mantis will eat aphids in a garden. I want to know if any of you have trained your Guineas to not eat Preying Mantis and just eat the bad bugs?


If you can't keep your Guineas from lying, cheating, stealing, holding up Brinks Armored trucks, and being all around criminals, how do you keep them from eating certain bugs? If you figure it out, let me know.....I'd like to train mine to eat cicadas and giant spiders. Also, if I could train them to keep my 15 year old son in line, that would be helpful too!
 
If you can't keep your Guineas from lying, cheating, stealing, holding up Brinks Armored trucks, and being all around criminals, how do you keep them from eating certain bugs? If you figure it out, let me know.....I'd like to train mine to eat cicadas and giant spiders. Also, if I could train them to keep my 15 year old son in line, that would be helpful too!


This is a problem.....
 
My spirea bush is filled with preying mantis. I think it is because, among other things, it is dense and offers protection from the birds.
Now I admit I do not have hardened criminal Guineas, just your run of the mill opinionated chickens, but perhaps rather then trying to reform the criminal element you could just increase the defense of your better behaved citizens.
 
My keets, now 2 weeks old, are starting to fly. We are moving them from the brooder space to an intermediate space either today or tomorrow. The new, intermediate space (until we get the big coop done) is a hoop-coop that is 7.5-ft by 12-ft (with 6-ft ceiling). I need some advice about how to set up the new space inside. Right now they have a "Mama-Heating-Pad" (MHP), which they were raised with, that is a cave-like construction of a piece of wire field fence, bent into a mound shape, and covered with the heating pad (now turned off and unplugged) and a towel on top. Most of the day they do not use the MHP anymore, but they try to sleep under still at night, even though they don't all fit under it any more. Also, one or another will scoot under it periodically during the day. QUESTIONS: 1. what type of bedding etc should I give them in the new larger (intermediate) space? I know we should give them some little roosts to develop onto, but what can I do about their need to still be inside a dark, protected space all huddled together? I was thinking we would move their current brooder (ex-large wire dog crate-- 48x30") inside the new space (raised on bricks) and somehow convert the whole interior into some kind of "safe space". 2. I was thinking of using a clear tarp on top of the hoop coop (as opposed to a dark, solid tarp). I was thinking that since they like to roost in trees that the clear top might be nicer for them. Here is a picture of the space. The back wall is in place, we will finish the front wall (with people door) today. It is 3 cattle panels bent into a 12-ft-long hoop-coop, all completely covered with hardware cloth. It gets direct sun in the morning but is shaded most of the day, dappled to dark shade. We'll put a waterproof tarp over 2/3 of the length, leaving 4-ft at the front to get weather and sky.
I would move their current brooder inside their new coop, at least for a little while. This way, they will have something familiar and there won't be such a "freak out" session when they move to their new space (it doesn't seem to take much to have Guineas completely lose their minds over new things). I have straw down in some of my coop for the keets. I've had keets try to eat wood shavings, so now avoid that. My keets are now 3 weeks old and are flying into the rafters of the coop (which are about 6-7 feet tall) along with the adults, so it won't be long until yours come out of their "safe space" to roost. As for the top of the coop, I would think that clear plastic would be good as long as it was durable and not easily torn or destroyed by a predator. I would also make sure that it did not let too much light in and get too hot, although it sounds like your coop is mostly in the shade.
 
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Took 2 days but they came out. Had to guide the last guy to the door, he was lost. All the older babies on their perch.
 

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