The adventures of free ranging guineas

Leaguinea

Songster
Jun 22, 2017
194
189
161
SW Ontario, Canada
A funny story about free ranging Guineas:

I have a batch of 28 guineas that I hatched out last year. I started to free range them a couple weeks ago. One of the males that is picked on and bullied moved out completely and now resides in the pen of goats :lau. I know this isn't extremely safe for him but he is happier and less stressed so I have left him there.
The other 27 guineas I was letting out in batches of 6 or 8 each morning and then herding them back in at night.
UNTIL one Tuesday evening I got home from work and 4 had disappeared. :eek: on 100 acres there are a lot of places for them to hide. I searched all the places I could think of but no luck. The next day I only let 4 out hoping that it would encourage the others to come home. When I got home Wednesday evening only the 4 I let out that morning were there. the others had not returned. Very discouraged and upset inside I locked those 4 into their pen and went up to the house to make supper, counting the others as lost for good.
My mom was out working in the flower garden and after getting supper on cooking I went out to talk to her, while we were talking we could hear the coyotes howling and yapping in the bush at the back of our property. We commented on the fact that they were howling this early in the evening usually don't hear them til around midnight or later. Then I heard something else, the sound of a guinea, it was coming from the bush as well. I took off across the hay field (still wearing my office casual dress and sandles):wee "I hear a guinea" I shouted over my shoulder to mom in answer to her puzzled "where are you going?" she yelled for my sister and the two of them followed my mad dash across the hay field and scramble down the over grown slope into the bush. I got a quick look at the rebel before he flew further into the overgrown underbrush. I followed the sound of him rustling in the weeds and the occasional peep sound he made. It began to get dark, the mosquitoes were about carrying me away, my mom and sister were complaining and I was getting ready to give up but then I saw him. I pulled out my phone and turned on the light and when he saw the light he slowed down his escaping, I think he wanted to be in that light. I followed him through the brush he would let me get just close enough to grab him then he would dash off again. This continued for probably 10 - 15 minutes. Finally with it being nearly dark in the bush I once again got within grabbing distance of him, this time I shut off the phone light and made a grab for him.. Gotcha! I caught and carried him out of the bush and brought him up to the barn and put him in the pen. So thankful for this rescue but still missing 3.:idunno
The next morning (Thursday) I didn't let any of them out to free range. I assumed that the coyotes had gotten the others and tried not to think about it. Coming home from work that evening, driving down our road I see this bird/creature/guinea cross the road in front of my car and wander into my neighbors front yard. The thought going through my head was "no way, you have got to be kidding me, seriously!!!" I quickly pull my car off the road and jump out trying to cut off the guineas path before it gets into my neighbors yard and mixes with her chickens or get killed by her dog, but no way, the thing starts to run all out away from me. So, totally embarrassed, I go to the door and knock and ask "Do you have guineas?" looking at me like I'm crazy (maybe I am) she say "No!", "Than that one is mine. Do you mind if I go in your yard and chase it home?" "Nope, have at it." so there I was, looking like a fool and trying to convince this bird that it could not just decide it liked the house across the road better than its own home. Finally after going back and forth across the yard, around the house, up and down the ditch (once again I am wearing my office clothes) He finally crossed the road and runs straight into the bulrushes in the front field, i get him out of there and than there was the guiding to get him back to the barn. After much instruction he went around the house, through the flower garden, around the pool fence, through the squash patch, through the drive shed and finally into the door of the barn and into the holding pen, where we found #3 of the missing 4 already in there waiting to be let back into his pen. So now I have 3 out of 4 missing birds returned. :clap
So now I go into the house and change into jeans and sweatshirt and my mom and I set out on a walk back the lane to the hay field to see if we can find the last one. we walk and talk and occasionally call for the guinea but no such luck. On our way back up the lane to the house I hear the loud call of a guinea. "Do you hear that?" I ask mom. (she is deaf in one ear due to a surgery and so has a hard time telling where sound is coming from.) Yes she heard it but not sure where it is coming from. I scan the area. There! on the pasture fence behind the barn is a guinea perched, standing tall and yelling loudly. In order to get to it without scaring it my mom went in the bottom of the barn where the goat pen is and I ran around behind the barn. Sure enough this was the 4th guinea that I as missing. I gentle urged him into the barn and back into the pen with all the others. And that night we all slept better. :love
Now I am building a run to transition them into.
 
Last edited:
A funny story about free ranging Guineas:

I have a batch of 28 guineas that I hatched out last year. I started to free range them a couple weeks ago. One of the males that is picked on and bullied moved out completely and now resides in the pen of goats :lau. I know this isn't extremely safe for him but he is happier and less stressed so I have left him there.
The other 27 guineas I was letting out in batches of 6 or 8 each morning and then herding them back in at night.
UNTIL one Tuesday evening I got home from work and 4 had disappeared. :eek: on 100 acres there are a lot of places for them to hide. I searched all the places I could think of but no luck. The next day I only let 4 out hoping that it would encourage the others to come home. When I got home Wednesday evening only the 4 I let out that morning were there. the others had not returned. Very discouraged and upset inside I locked those 4 into their pen and went up to the house to make supper, counting the others as lost for good.
My mom was out working in the flower garden and after getting supper on cooking I went out to talk to her, while we were taking we could here the coyotes howling and yapping in the bush at the back of our property. We commented on the fact that they were howling this early in the evening usually don't hear them til around midnight or later. Then I heard something else, the sound of a guinea, it was coming from the bush as well. I took off across the hay field (still wearing my office casual dress and sandles):wee "I hear a guinea" I shouted over my shoulder to mom in answer to her puzzled "where are you going?" she yelled for my sister and the two of them followed my mad dash across the hay field and scramble down the over grown slope into the bush. I got a quick look at the rebel before he flew further into the overgrown underbrush. I followed the sound of him rustling in the weeds and the occasional peep sound he made. It began to get dark, the mosquitoes were about carrying me away, my mom and sister were complaining and I was getting ready to give up but then I saw him. I pulled out my phone and turned on the light and when he saw the light he slowed down his escaping, I think he wanted to be in that light. I followed him through the brush he would let me get just close enough to grab him then he would dash off again. This continued for probably 10 - 15 minutes. Finally with it being nearly dark in the bush I once again got within grabbing distance of him, this time I shut off the phone light and made a grab for him.. Gotcha! I caught and carried him out of the bush and brought him up to the barn and put him in the pen. So thankful for this rescue but still missing 3.:idunno
The next morning (Thursday) I didn't let any of them out to free range. I assumed that the coyotes had gotten the others and tried not to think about it. Coming home from work that evening, driving down our road I see this bird/creature/guinea cross the road in front of my car and wander into my neighbors front yard. The thought going through my head was "no way, you have got to be kidding me, seriously!!!" I quickly pull my car off the road and jump out trying to cut off the guineas path before it gets into my neighbors yard and mixes with her chickens or get killed by her dog, but no way, the thing starts to run all out away from me. So, totally embarrassed, I go to the door and knock and ask "Do you have guineas?" looking at me like I'm crazy (maybe I am) she say "No!", "Than that one is mine. Do you mind if I go in yard and chase it home?" "Nope, have at it." so there I was, looking like a fool and trying to convince this bird that it could not just decide it liked the house across the road better than its own home. Finally after going back and forth across the yard, around the house, up and down the ditch (once again I am wearing my office clothes) He finally crossed the road and runs straight into the bulrushes in the front field, i get him out of there and than there was the guiding to get him back to the barn. After much instruction he went around the house, through the flower garden, around the pool fence, through the squash patch, through the drive shed and finally into the door of the barn and into the holding pen, where we found #3 of the missing 4 already in there waiting to be let back into his pen. So now I have 3 out of 4 missing birds returned. :clap
So now I go into the house and change into jeans and sweatshirt and my mom and I set out on a walk back the lane to the hay field to see if we can find the last one. we walk and talk and occasionally call for the guinea but no such luck. On our way back up the lane to the house I hear the loud call of a guinea. "Do you hear that?" I ask mom. (she is deaf in one ear due to a surgery and so has a hard time telling where sound is coming from.) Yes she heard it but not sure where it is coming from. I scan the area. There! on the pasture fence behind the barn is a guinea perched, standing tall and yelling loudly. In order to get to it without scaring it my mom went in the bottom of the barn where the goat pen is and I ran around behind the barn. Sure enough this was the 4th guinea that I as missing. I gentle urged him into the barn and back into the pen with all the others. And that night we all slept better. :love
Now I am building a run to transition them into
:lau:gig:lau
Such are the Days of Ours Lives as guinea owners.
Good luck and have fun in your life with guineas.
 
Loved your story. I keep thinking 'been there, done that!'
My sister-in-law was complaining about being overweight. I told her to come follow me around for a few days. :D I walk miles in the spring and summer looking for hidden nests and chasing unruly guineas around.
Life is an adventure with guineas but I can't really imagine not having them now. :wee
 
Guineas aren't protection for chickens but they will sure let you know if there is something different around. Sometimes you think they never shut up! :duc

I live in Central Florida. On my 6.5 acres, I have multiple hawks, foxes, panthers and I have even heard we have a bear. I could deal with the noise part of it. I am not sure that I am up to chasing them all of the time. :D
 
I live in Central Florida. On my 6.5 acres, I have multiple hawks, foxes, panthers and I have even heard we have a bear. I could deal with the noise part of it. I am not sure that I am up to chasing them all of the time. :D

It doesn't happen every day. Most of the time the guineas go out to free range thru the day and are back in the henhouse by evening. But guineas can fly over a fence to get OUT of our pasture but they will walk the fence for hours trying to get back IN. I've had to rescue them many times from the neighbor's goat pasture which is a quarter mile away. Or get them off of the gravel road which is 6oo' from their henhouse. And with a 35 acre sage brush covered pasture for them to roam in I might find their nests full of eggs anywhere. So I do walk a lot. But this time of year I don't worry about my weight at least. :lol:
 
I have had guineas 20 years and am still trying to figure them out. I once had a group of 10 adult giuneas given to me as the owners were moving away. I brought them home, confined them in a pen for 2 weeks so they came to recognize there new home and new family members. They seamed ok with the new digs so i released them out with my flock of guineas and chickens and all was well until a couple weeks later the group split in 2 and went out the driveway and each went oppoisate directions down our country road. The group that went north got turned back by my neighbors border collie. The group that went south i tracked for 2 miles, going house to house and by people who saw the group along the road from there cars. I never did find them. Like to say they went walk-about and were looking for their previous home or just got lost. They probably went to roosting in trees at night and one by one were picked off. Giuneas we hatch and raise here on the farm still wander accross the road in there search for fresh grasshoppers occasinally but always return to the coop at the end of the day.
 

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