Crossbred
Crossbred helmeted guineafowl are domestic Numida meleagris produced from more than one line, color variety, or farm strain. In ordinary poultry use, the word usually does not mean a hybrid with another guineafowl species; it means the ancestry behind the bird is mixed or intentionally combined. The result may be sturdy, useful stock with color, size, and temperament that vary within the flock.
Owners manage crossbred guineafowl for the same realities as any domestic guineas: noisy social birds, strong ranging habits, seasonal laying, and keets that need warmth and protection. Breeders who want predictable colors should track parent birds and pen matings separately, while homestead keepers may care more about fertility, survival, and flock cohesion. The crossbred label helps buyers understand that offspring may not match a single named color variety.
Colors: Black, Brown, Buff, Buff Dundotte, Chocolate, Coral Blue, Lavender, Pearl Gray, Pied, Porcelain, Royal Purple, Slate, Spotted, Tan, White