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- #21
I <3 BYC!
What would I do without the ear piercing squawks of my guineas to keep my mixed flock safe and alert me to a danger in the yard?!
:yiipchick
[COLOR=FF0000]How do you keep your guineas home?[/COLOR]
This will be my 3rd batch of guineas and if they leave also, it will be my last batch.
My first guineas just showed up one summer in our yard and stayed. Had about 9 of them and one way or another whittled down to 5 before they left.
The next summer I got an incubator and guinea eggs. About the time they grew up, they were gone.
One time, between the first guineas and my first hatchlings, we were out driving around and way out back of where we live there was some guineas. I figure the first guineas came from there and went back. I figure my first incubated guineas must have heard the guineas way out back and went to visit and either got locked up or decided to stay. I have read here that if I raise them with chicks, they should stay but when I first incubated them, I got adult chickens to mother them. Of course the hens didn't mother them but even though the keets were raised with the chickens, it did not stop them from leaving.
About 4 1/2 weeks ago I put chicken eggs and put guinea eggs in the incubator together, at first not realizing that guinea eggs take longer to hatch but they are in with the chicks now and don't seem to be having a problem. The chicks are about a week older than the keets but the keets were trying their best to get under the chicks wings. So cute.
I just need them to stay here.
Since we live in the city, if they do leave we would possibly hear them, or our neighbors will et us know where they are.. We have a close nit community.. They would be our neighborhood guinea's
