Mixed Breed
A mixed-breed guinea fowl is a domestic guinea fowl whose color line, farm strain, or ancestry is blended or not being kept as a pure variety. Most such birds are still helmeted guinea fowl, Numida meleagris, but their flock history may include pearl, lavender, white, royal purple, slate, or other varieties. Mixed-breed wording is useful when appearance and parentage do not support a more precise color label.
For owners, mixed-breed guineas are often valued for practical work rather than exhibition uniformity. They forage actively, sound alarms readily, and can be challenging to confine once mature. Successful management starts with secure brooding, consistent roost training, predator control, and realistic expectations about noise. Breeders should describe mixed flocks honestly and avoid promising exact chick colors. Buyers should choose lively, well-grown birds from healthy stock rather than focusing only on the variety name.
Colors: Dark Purple, Lavender-Gray, Light Purple, Pure White, Purplish-Gray with White Spots, Slate