Guineas are weird. In case you hadn’t ever noticed.
I’m not sure they feel like part of the crowd in the chicken yard. They keep to themselves as much as possible, like visiting beings trapped on an alien planet.
Everybody’s out of the brooder now.
The big chicks, the group of Araucanas we got a couple months ago, are growing and pushing their boundaries, trying to race past me every time I open the chicken yard door. They’re too young yet to go out into the big, wide world.
The “littles” as I call them–the smaller group of younger chicks that Weston brought home from Ag class one day–are just out of the brooder and scared of everybody. They huddle together in corners.
I love my pretty Rouens.
Their beaks always look muddy like that because they’re always standing in puddles and doing this:
The ducks need their own house and their own yard. We got them a baby pool and filled it up with water. That was dumb, don’t do that. A guinea got in there, got waterlogged and couldn’t get out, and nearly drowned.
I don’t think there’s a lot of room in there for brain cells.
We wrapped it in towels, dried it off, and kept it separated until it felt better. It recovered. And we took the baby pool out.
Someday the ducks will have their own fenced yard around the pond. Until then, they have to settle for what they can get.
The water’s always muddy like that because half the time the ducks are standing in it.
Which then doesn’t deter them from sticking their faces in there.
Aside from the big, regular poultry waterer, they have two big pans of water I fill up three times a day. And they wish it were more. The term “like ducks take to water” makes so much sense after you have ducks. Chickens and guineas, they just drink enough water to survive. They weren’t meant to live with ducks. They have nothing in common with ducks. Ducks, they live for water. They wax rhapsodic for water. Water is in their soul.
“Come live with me and be my love….
…..and we shall all the pleasures prove.”
Chicken: “Oh, brother.”
“I can’t take much more of this, Mabel, I can’t. I’m GONNA BLOW!”
Miss Judy says:
I can remember my dad saying “Now, he’s an odd duck”. The more I learn about ducks the more I understand that saying. Suzanne, they sure are pretty but I’ll stick with chickens!
On June 11, 2010 at 1:15 am
SuzieQ says:
Love all the pics of your feathered family members. :snuggle:
On June 11, 2010 at 3:07 am
CindyP says:
Awww…so much growing up going on. :duck:
On June 11, 2010 at 6:13 am
Linda says:
Hehe.
Have a great weekend!
On June 11, 2010 at 7:32 am
KentuckyFarmGirl says:
I’m having the same “water” conflict with my 4 young geese (stupid raccoon got one of them through the fence) and the young chickens. I plan on working on a different set up today. I never even thought about the chicks getting into the geese’s kiddie pool! I’ll definitely be taking it out of there today.
On June 11, 2010 at 8:49 am
Cheryl LeMay says:
I have a kiddie pool for my ducks and geese with my chickens. What I did is put some big rocks in the pool near the edge so in case a chicken got in it could get on a rock and get out.So far the chickens perch on the edge and drink but none have fallen in.
On June 11, 2010 at 10:49 am
Carol says:
No offense, Suzanne, but those guineas are pretty ugly. Why do you have them? For their eggs?
On June 11, 2010 at 10:56 am
Suzanne McMinn says:
The guineas are just for fun. They eat a lot of bugs, too!
On June 11, 2010 at 11:11 am
BuckeyeGirl says:
Their eggs taste just like chicken eggs, though the shells sure are thick. I’m told the meat is a great delicacy, very popular including (or especially) in fancy restaurants with real chefs, as lighter than pheasant and quail, but still a dark meat game bird. I can’t say for sure about the meat, though as far as the eggs go, I can speak about that.
On June 11, 2010 at 12:21 pm
lavenderblue says:
How did you ever manage to get that first picture of the two guinea hens coming out of the coop at the same time? I want guineas ( and chickens and ducks and acres and acres of land and……)
On June 11, 2010 at 4:39 pm
monica says:
Now you know that is what they mean by “birds of a feather, flock together”. I bet the lonely duck is happy to have other ducks to talk with again! :duck:
On June 11, 2010 at 5:36 pm
Cindy says:
I had guineas last year that were raised with my chickens. They got so mean that I couldn’t let my hens out to free range & they beat the bachelor roosters & ducks up all the time, so they had to go. I miss their comical antics and the noise they make. They are good to keep snakes away from the house and great alarms when strangers are about (people or varmit) but I just couldn’t stand to see them abusing all the other poultry.
Love your stories of farm life. Reminds me of our place when our kids were growing up. Now I’m trying to get back into it for the grandsons.
On June 11, 2010 at 7:59 pm
princessvanessa says:
Oh yes, guineas are dumb and dumber. When I was young, the neighbor lady bought a flock of guinea hens; as soon as she released them they came screaming (literally) over to our house and decided that our property was their new home.
What a noisy bunch and they pooped all over our patio as they looked at their own reflection in the sliding door. Sometimes a guinea-hen took offense at something they saw the “other bird” (their own reflection) do and would fly up and into the sliding window.
They did work the yard over and ate a lot of crane fly larvae. But my dad still muttered and cursed the neighbor lady and “her d@mn guinea-hens” under his breath.
On June 11, 2010 at 9:09 pm
cabynfevr says:
I bet when you dump the water pans there’s an inch of mud too! They muck in the mud with their beaks…wash said beaks in the water…repeat. Fortunately, my ducks have access to a small brook…any other water is kept in the barn or it’s a big muddy mess! I do love my ducks and geese though!
On June 11, 2010 at 9:45 pm
bubbashome says:
I never thought of that with my guineas but fortunately we survived. I do have a wading pool for my duck and goose – the guineas never tried to go into the pool – just drink. Weird how that happens. But I’ve “saved” a couple of my chickens who fell into the goats’ water so I do understand
On June 11, 2010 at 11:34 pm
Runningtrails says:
Those ducks are cute! They need their own yard with a little pond that is fenced.
On June 12, 2010 at 3:54 pm
maryann says:
make sure that when you build that duck pond that there is a ramp for the babies to get out. A late friend didn’t realize that and lost a bunch of babies. The adults could hop out but the babies couldn’t and they all drowned.
On June 14, 2010 at 4:33 am
Cher says:
We have three week old chick(en)s and am taking in any tip, idea, recipe I can
On June 19, 2011 at 9:54 pm
zteagirl71 says:
Hilarious! “I’m going to blow!” My sister is the duck owner and I prefer chickens, even though I must admit the ducks are darn cute! They must know I prefer chickens or they smell them on me because they rarely give the the time of day. My sister’s lady duck (Jack), I call her the mud queen because that is usually what she is covered in! :chicken:
On March 4, 2014 at 10:04 pm