Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Natural Pest Control


Wouldn't it be great to have built-in, organic pest control for the yard and garden that doubles as an alarm to let you know when people are visiting? Guinea fowl to the rescue! Nine guinea keets of varied colors (helmeted, lavender and white) and joined the staff here at Red Clay last Friday morning after hatching on Thursday and are doing well. Of course, it may be time to get them out of the dining room and into something more secure before they start escaping from their make-shift brooder.

Guineafowl are great for pest control. They patrol the area searching out bugs and sometimes even snakes. I understand that they especially enjoy ticks. They are much more garden-friendly than chickens because they don't scratch the ground looking for food like chickens. As an added bonus, if somebody enters their area, they will raise the alarm and let everyone know. These guys will have the run of the property and hopefully will help us with some outdoor bug control over the summer. Boy, do we need it!

If you're planning to add guineas to your place, here are a few tips:

Don't buy adults because they will most likely wander off an disappear. Guineas imprint on the place they were raised and will feel little attachment to a new home as an adult. They must be brought in a keets if you want them to free range.

Find a reputable local source for your keets. You can buy them from hatcheries for reasonable prices, but hatcheries have rather large shipping fees tagged on to the price at checkout. I found my source on craigslist.org and had a long conversation with her before agreeing to buy from her.

Keep your keets warm and well fed for the first few weeks of life. You can find an abundance of information about brooding guinea keets on the internet by doing a quick Google search so I won't attempt to recreate that info here. The bottom line is this; for the sake of the birds, do some research before jumping in.

These little guys are fun to watch. They are much more amusing than the chickens ever were. Get yourself some guineafowl today and enjoy!


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