interesting, most people I know speak highly of them, she does bring a few good points and seems like a lot of the comments on the bottom affirm her thoughts
1. They are loud. Let me say that again. Guineas are LOUD!!! No cute little clucking noises from these guys, its full out screaming and screeching. Sometimes this is spun as a positive. I dont know how many times I read that guinea fowl make great alarm systems. And to an extent that is true. Guineas will alert you to strange dogs, people and cars coming on to your property. But they will also alert you to the fact that a door just slammed, the wind blew, or a car drove by a mile down the road. They also have a habit of moving as one solitary unit. Where one goes, the others go. It is actually sort of fascinating to watch, but when one guinea gets separated from the flock? Youd better cover your ears until they find each other again!
2. They can be bullies. All birds have a pecking order. When you have new additions there will always be a period adjustment while they figure out the new order. And if you thought this was a tough process to watch with chickens, you will be amazed with guineas- these guys are mean! The guinea fowl figured out their own pecking order eventually but be prepared for a longer adjustment if you have other birds as well. Our guineas were raised from keets with chicks. They were together from the beginning. When we added the young birds- both guinea and chicken- to our mature flock the usual fight for top bird began. 6 months later- half our chickens were missing their tail and back feathers. They were afraid to go into the coop at night once the guineas were in there. Half the time we let the guineas roost in the trees just to give the chickens a break. Which leads me into my next point
3. They love to roam. I recently shared my thoughts on free range chickens, but I assume if you want to purchase guinea fowl it is mostly for their tick-eating tendencies. Ill tell you now that they wont eat many ticks in a covered run. They are free range birds and they take it to the extreme. If youve done your research about raising guinea fowl you will know that you should raise them in their final home, or keep them locked in their new home for quite a few weeks before allowing them outdoors so that they know where home is. I am here to warn you, even if you do that, they will still have trouble coming home at night. Guineas can fly pretty well and jump pretty high which means fencing isnt really going to do much. Once they are comfortable with being outdoors they will start pushing the limits. They will cross roads, bother your neighbors, terrorize the horses down the street- all while screaming and squawking. They might come home and night, they might not. They might go into their coop or they might find the tallest tree imaginable and fly and jump their way to the tiny top branches.
can read the rest here
5 Mar ’12
Ours were OK. Not noisy at all but one did roam a mile away and get hit on a road. We were given them by a friend and did not quarantine them -- they had mites. One of my chickens died from the mites -- bummer.
I preferred them over chickens -- they wanted nothing to do with us and wouldn't bother us like the chickens.
5 Mar ’12
I don't know -- plans for this Spring are up in the air. I think we should get a puppy and 2 baby goats -- but I like that we could get pigs and only keep them for a few months. That way we don't need to worry about keeping the animals over winter. Chickens are an afterthought for me -- we put a lot of time and money into the ones we had and we go '0' eggs and most were killed by predators. I'm not sure if it is worth it.
5 Mar ’12
We have little. There is a butcher shop right down the road and I was hoping to use them to store the meat. My mom's family did that when they grew up on the farm. The butcher would hold all of the meat for a fee and they would go pick up some when they needed more.
My battery bank couldn't take the additional load but I think with a doubled-in-size battery bank (hopefully this summer) it would work out.
Most Users Ever Online: 698
Currently Online:
45 Guest(s)
Currently Browsing this Page:
1 Guest(s)
Top Posters:
easytapper: 2149
DangerDuke: 2030
groinkick: 1667
PorkChopsMmm: 1515
Gravel Road: 1455
Newest Members:
Forum Stats:
Groups: 1
Forums: 12
Topics: 11482
Posts: 58640
Member Stats:
Guest Posters: 2
Members: 19842
Moderators: 0
Admins: 1
Administrators: K