Yes I am getting 1 year olds. I am terrified of raising keets—they seem very fragile and brooding stresses me out enough already

I would like to get more but I don’t think I can fit 8 (which is all the seller has available right now) full grown guineas in my car with three full grown chickens or I would probably try. We are driving two hours to get these so hopefully when it comes time to get more I can find them locally.
Fragile, yes. Your challenge will be bonding with adults. When the time comes, if it comes, check out the guinea farm-they ship with great care & color selections are amazing. I've had success with Rural King keets out of the store bin, not so much
TSC shipped ones. But unless you want different colors, that shouldn't be an issue. You'll have plenty of eggs this spring..if you can find them.
I would most definitely keep them penned for the alotted time so they can learn this is now home.
I was never good at easter egg hunts, so my hens are restricted during breeding season. No one gets to free range unless I am out with them, & during season, the hens have a daytime covered pen I carry them out to so they get the space to wander but not go off to build a nest somewhere. Later in the season, most will march straight into it, but they have to be reminded every year. We actually started that today. The boys won't wander off if the hens are penned in, & gives them time to blow off steam chasing each other. I've had too many hit by cars, disappeared, and one who had a nest in the coop but escaped one day,went out in the field to meditate on a quickly devised nest, oblivious to the bush hog that came through chopping down weeds.

I have thoroughly enjoyed raising keets by hand (once R2 & others taught me how to keep them alive). Even the oldest ones now still seem to know I'm "mom", so I can pick them up, hold them, carry them, clip their nails, tend to wounds, separate fighters, etc. All bets are off during mating season, but out of season, they stay on my one acre of property, walking the same route I walked them on when introducing them to the great outdoors.
Recently I told Himself I'd like to have a parrot ...and he brought home 2 chickens.

These I have never had before, so learning all over again. They are nothing like guineas. They're quiet they're calm, & imo, stinkier. Lol. But they are pretty, and have settled into their own new coop outside. I haven't turned them loose yet...they watch from the safety of their run in horror as the guineas run by.
I did get that parrot....I adore her, feel bad when I leave her to go to the I others. Basically, I spend a lot of time scooping.
