بسم الله ماشاء الله تبارك الله عليكم بالخير و البركة In the name of God, God willing, may God bless you with goodness and blessings شكرا لك ، بارك الله فيك أيضا! Translation: thank you, God bless you too!
Dad is going to make a video someday on how to make your own incubator like this one... he's had his for more than 20 years! It was bought from Lambing Flat Enterprises in Young, NSW Australia back in 1999. I'm not sure if they still make them, I have no idea... Dad calls it the " Chookiebator" after the guy who helped make it called it that. It's a good name 😂 He also customize it to incubate around 200 eggs, not much room left but works well!
Like any population of living things, you have live ones, sick ones, old ones, young ones, shy ones, out going ones, adventurous ones, picked on ones, timid ones, and cute curious ones. Some deaths are preventable, but all you can do is your best to learn from your experience, and make adjustments accordingly to minimize any loss. In nature, the mortality rate of guinea fowl is very high... who knows how they survive ;D
Les petits pintades ,est-ce que ils meurent si il boirent de l'eau.?? Translation: "The little guinea fowls, do they die if they drink water.??" The little guinea fowl need water, or they will die... but the water dish need to be shallow so they don't drown Translation: "Les petites pintades ont besoin d'eau, sinon elles mourront... mais le plat d'eau doit être peu profond pour ne pas se noyer"
Guinea fowl chicks are interesting birds to look after. The mother Guinea fowl are not good at keeping the chicks safe, and will usually start walking around everywhere with the babies as soon as they hatch. We've found that it's best to take the chicks away from the mum, and look after them by hand (if you've hatched them in the incubator you'll have to do this anyway). The chicks will need a heat source, reptile heating pads and chick heaters are really good (you can get these from ebay), but you could use a hot water bottle wrapped in a towel to keep them warm. We keep them in a box in a warm room; they will also need food - chick mash works well, and a small dish of water (small enough so they don't drown). When they start getting bigger they may want to fly out of the box, so start putting them out side on some grass in a cage during the day, and bring them in at night if it gets cold. When you think they are old enough, you can leave them outside. I hope this helps :)
I was amazed with the effort put into this video; it was amazing! Congrats!!
Supermercado
بسم الله ماشاء الله تبارك الله عليكم بالخير و البركة 🤝👍
بسم الله ماشاء الله تبارك الله عليكم بالخير و البركة
In the name of God, God willing, may God bless you with goodness and blessings
شكرا لك ، بارك الله فيك أيضا!
Translation: thank you, God bless you too!
I love this incubator
Dad is going to make a video someday on how to make your own incubator like this one... he's had his for more than 20 years! It was bought from Lambing Flat Enterprises in Young, NSW Australia back in 1999. I'm not sure if they still make them, I have no idea... Dad calls it the " Chookiebator" after the guy who helped make it called it that. It's a good name 😂 He also customize it to incubate around 200 eggs, not much room left but works well!
Out of 72 keets, how many survived to reach adulthood?
This is really great
Thank you! @SundayMIACHI
my mother and I have 10 pearl keets, now about 18 days old.
That's lovely! Hope they are doing well!
बेचारे कितने क्यूट और कितने अच्छे लग रहे हैं 🐔🐔🐔🐔🐔🐓🐓🐓🐓🐓🐓🐓🐓🐓🐧🐧🐧🐧🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣💘💘💘💘💘💘💘🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
What if they hatched with her mum ?? is it ok if took them from her ??
omg aw they grow up so fast i love them
ben de me una ginea 😂
great content thanks
Glad you enjoyed it!
Do you lose baby guinea fowl sometimes when you're raising them?
Like any population of living things, you have live ones, sick ones, old ones, young ones, shy ones, out going ones, adventurous ones, picked on ones, timid ones, and cute curious ones. Some deaths are preventable, but all you can do is your best to learn from your experience, and make adjustments accordingly to minimize any loss. In nature, the mortality rate of guinea fowl is very high... who knows how they survive ;D
Thanks for the information!
Sending my full support
Thank you, Janet :)
Les petits pintades ,est-ce que ils meurent si il boirent de l'eau.??
Les petits pintades ,est-ce que ils meurent si il boirent de l'eau.??
Translation: "The little guinea fowls, do they die if they drink water.??"
The little guinea fowl need water, or they will die... but the water dish need to be shallow so they don't drown
Translation: "Les petites pintades ont besoin d'eau, sinon elles mourront... mais le plat d'eau doit être peu profond pour ne pas se noyer"
awww
How to do care of day 1 chick for grow
Guinea fowl chicks are interesting birds to look after. The mother Guinea fowl are not good at keeping the chicks safe, and will usually start walking around everywhere with the babies as soon as they hatch. We've found that it's best to take the chicks away from the mum, and look after them by hand (if you've hatched them in the incubator you'll have to do this anyway).
The chicks will need a heat source, reptile heating pads and chick heaters are really good (you can get these from ebay), but you could use a hot water bottle wrapped in a towel to keep them warm. We keep them in a box in a warm room; they will also need food - chick mash works well, and a small dish of water (small enough so they don't drown). When they start getting bigger they may want to fly out of the box, so start putting them out side on some grass in a cage during the day, and bring them in at night if it gets cold. When you think they are old enough, you can leave them outside.
I hope this helps :)
Nitido
thanks mate!
Adress bhejiy kaha ka hai
no address love, they're not for sale mate :)
K 68>iijj6