Laurie Williams
In the Brooder
- May 2, 2025
- 32
- 20
- 31
Hello,
I feel terrible. I raised my Guinea flock myself, and there are two flocks, one I got four months ago as babies (6 of them),
and another similar flock (7) about three months ago. They live with chickens I got at the same time as first batch, and second flock I got with 4 Indian runner ducklings.
I went out to the run this morning and found one of the guineas from the first flock dead on the ground. It’s an indoor coop and run set up, off the ground with hardwire around it. No predator got in. The Guinea’s body has no trauma and wasn’t ill. None of the other birds look sick or were harmed. Only two things changed recently. 1) I added a 55 gallon stock tank filled with water as a pond for the ducks two days ago. It’s above ground requiring a ramp to get in the water.
2). The night before, I gave them celery and carrot pieces. I sliced the carrots and the seemed too big so I cut them in quarters. The celery was cut from the store but was too big so I cut them down too.
Could the Guinea have got in the pond, struggled in the water, and aspirated? He didn’t look wet at all, but may not mean much.
Could the Guinea have choked if I didn’t cut the veggies small enough? I didn’t give them anything from the nightshade family.
I feel terrible. I raised my Guinea flock myself, and there are two flocks, one I got four months ago as babies (6 of them),
and another similar flock (7) about three months ago. They live with chickens I got at the same time as first batch, and second flock I got with 4 Indian runner ducklings.
I went out to the run this morning and found one of the guineas from the first flock dead on the ground. It’s an indoor coop and run set up, off the ground with hardwire around it. No predator got in. The Guinea’s body has no trauma and wasn’t ill. None of the other birds look sick or were harmed. Only two things changed recently. 1) I added a 55 gallon stock tank filled with water as a pond for the ducks two days ago. It’s above ground requiring a ramp to get in the water.
2). The night before, I gave them celery and carrot pieces. I sliced the carrots and the seemed too big so I cut them in quarters. The celery was cut from the store but was too big so I cut them down too.
Could the Guinea have got in the pond, struggled in the water, and aspirated? He didn’t look wet at all, but may not mean much.
Could the Guinea have choked if I didn’t cut the veggies small enough? I didn’t give them anything from the nightshade family.