perchie.girl
RIP 1953-2021
Thanks I'll listen for the special two syllable butt-crack call!
Ps; do the eggs incubate the same as chicken eggs? Hmmmmm do I dare?
28 days exactly one week longer. You can hatch em in with chicken eggs you just start the Guineas one week earlier. I went to the house today to strip eggs out of the coop to make sure when I collect on Saturday all eggs will be no older than three days old. I was able to get to reach about two thirds of the guinea eggs. Most were very very light indicating they have been sitting a long time. So hopefully by Saturday they will have layed some more where i can reach them. I know they are firtile just dont know how old they are so don't be surprised if you have to toss several.
Guinea eggs are about the size of bantam eggs and when you crack them open they are fifty percent yolk. They have tough shells so in order to crack them open for cooking you have to get them started by whacking it with the back of a knife. Probably why they survive being played soccer with by the whole flock.....
Oh and the Keets are little Jackbooters.... They run in a flock in mass and screech at you EVERY time they see you. LOL. They can fly by their second week having grown from Bantam sized to chick sized with flight feathers that stick out behind them like Batmans capes..... And were not talking flittering up to a perch six inches off the floor..... They can shoot up at least four feet. By three weeks in the wild they would be perching with mom in the trees.
So incubation time 28 days give or take. Brooding takes a brooder with a lid. You can try to tame them but good luck on that... it has been done not by me.....

They remain wilder than Chickens but they can be "conditionied" to come in to the coop at night. Best way to do it is provide White millet at bed time and get them used to you calling out something or blowing a whistle or using a clicker to associate that noise with getting some Guinea CRACK..... White millet. I had my whole flock launch them selves from the rocks above the house and fly over the house to land in the poultry yard when I hollered out "TREAT TREAT TREAT"..... It was a sight to see. Trick is Not to ever feed white millet except when you provide that stimulus. The noise has to be something they can hear from a couple of acres away. Because they do range far.
I lost my little previous flock by not cooping them up at night. I figured they wanted to roost in the tree next to the coop so they would be safe..... I forgot that Bobcats are very good climbers.... Sigh.
deb