" who choose's between the cock/female"

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Well guys im still on the float..

One of the female went missing for two days ( dont ask me where she was ) she then return on the third day...
I have noticed something about her that she always went missing during their breakfast and im afraid that of losing her from starvation.
I know she's not broody but i have a strong desire of her. Beacaus she only comes back during sunset.
I want them to free-range as much as they please. Because i know we have no predators but hunting for nests site is'nt what i want.....

Well im just still a little bit lost in the floating leaves of autumn wind

ludwing, As you have no preditors then awesome you can let her breed free range I very very rarely loose a female on nest and I have dozens breeding all over the place

Good luck
 
Well i guess you right mybe she's laying somewhere:

well what i have experience in the guinea nature is...
Usually from late fall to late winter they assemble forming military like column.
In the early spring pairs engage with the male vigilantly and aggressively gaurds and defend his female, and forego feeding, engaging instead in caurtship feeding, catching and droping grass-hoppers infront of his mate
The pairs start to wander far from their normal sorounding to seek a nest site somewhere.

Well chook i guess i should try to follow her to her hidden nest ( if the is ) althought its rare cought-eye them mate.
From their secretiveness iv'e been told to lock them up to see whether she's laying or not because a coop is the only best way to keep guineas from become astray-layers

To your wishes
 
ludwing, As you have no preditors then awesome you can let her breed free range I very very rarely loose a female on nest and I have dozens breeding all over the place

Good luck

In a yard, I'd guess. Or do your dogs keep the predators away?


Well i guess you right mybe she's laying somewhere:

well what i have experience in the guinea nature is...
Usually from late fall to late winter they assemble forming military like column.
In the early spring pairs engage with the male vigilantly and aggressively gaurds and defend his female, and forego feeding, engaging instead in caurtship feeding, catching and droping grass-hoppers infront of his mate
The pairs start to wander far from their normal sorounding to seek a nest site somewhere.

Well chook i guess i should try to follow her to her hidden nest ( if the is ) althought its rare cought-eye them mate.
From their secretiveness iv'e been told to lock them up to see whether she's laying or not because a coop is the only best way to keep guineas from become astray-layers

To your wishes

Best wishes, hope all goes well.
 
Well the yard is kept protected by souldia boys ( dogs ) no predators are found.....

Well i hope the venture will come to an end with its results no matter what they are
I shall now let the nature be
mybe waiting can help ( of her returning home with lots of baby keets whinning behind their mother ) because im free from them to select any site for nesting site as that predators in my location are rare sight-caught.

Well thanks ( chook4life ) and ( colescreek ) for your time...great benedictions shall come to your vision mind's....thanks alot.....

Your wishe's
 
Well i guess you right mybe she's laying somewhere:

well what i have experience in the guinea nature is...
Usually from late fall to late winter they assemble forming military like column.
In the early spring pairs engage with the male vigilantly and aggressively gaurds and defend his female, and forego feeding, engaging instead in caurtship feeding, catching and droping grass-hoppers infront of his mate
The pairs start to wander far from their normal sorounding to seek a nest site somewhere.

Well chook i guess i should try to follow her to her hidden nest ( if the is ) althought its rare cought-eye them mate.
From their secretiveness iv'e been told to lock them up to see whether she's laying or not because a coop is the only best way to keep guineas from become astray-layers

To your wishes

Here in Oz we don't keep them cooped as theres no need they breed so well free range and the keets grow big and strong and no losses
 
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Here in Oz we don't keep them cooped as theres no need they breed so well free range and the keets grow big and strong and no losses

That's simply not true and you know it. I also live 'here in Oz', not far from you actually, and plenty of people 'here in Oz' lose Guineas to predators. Please do not persist in spreading misinformation.
 
They sound great ludwing, we are so lucky we don't need protectors here either with no preditors but those dogs sound fantastic

You're joking, right? Yeah, in Oz, we have 'no preditors' --- no dogs, no cats, no quolls, no phascogales, no bandicoots, no venomous snakes, no constrictor snakes, no rats, no native rodents, no dingoes, no raptors, none of all those other predators we have... Even a real novice about Australian info knows what a dingo is, and knows we have a feral cat problem, and plenty of snakes, at the very least. So much for 'no preditors'.

You are deliberately misinforming people who actually know better, just as you know better. Nobody is fooled.

You most obviously don't care about the outcome of people naively trusting your misinformation. That's unjustifiable.
 
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