First up for him is the Meads Cup semifinal this Saturday, when his North Otago side takes the long trip to Ruatoria to play East Coast.
He will be playing on a ground probably just mowed the day before and watched by people sitting in utes and even the odd spectator who has come on horseback. The crowd will undoubtedly number no more than a couple of hundred.
This is real down-to-earth stuff, the amateur game, though there will be no quarter given and none asked as the sides look to make the final of the Meads Cup.
But from the back blocks of the East Coast and in about six weeks' time, Guyton will get to experience the upper reaches of the game.
The 22-year-old, who won the the Biggest Boot competition at Christchurch Airport on Sunday, will for those efforts get an all-expenses paid trip to London to watch the All Blacks take on England at Twickenham.
A crowd of more than 80,000 will have royalty mingling with the corporate set and the champagne swirling.
It is a long way from the rubbish run for Guyton - he works for TransPacific Waste Management, helping clear rubbish bins from the North Otago rural area - but one he deserved because of his efforts with the boot at the weekend.
Guyton smacked the ball just under 60m in the contest on Sunday, and said it was a close run thing.
"There was a swirling sort of wind around and so it was kind of tricky. I was surprised to win but gave myself a chance. I don't know who I will take. There are a couple of candidates but I'm keeping my options open," Guyton said.
He was up against Pera Gibbs, from Otago, in the final.
Although Gibbs kicked a couple of hefty place kicks, both of his went out of bounds, leaving Guyton with the big prize.
Guyton, who represented the North Otago union, is part of a North Otago team which has emerged from the pack to gain the final spot in the last four of the Meads Cup. It did so by bagging four tries in its 28-7 win over Thames Valley in Oamaru on Saturday.
"It was awesome to get those tries. We were the only team around the country which managed to do it on Saturday.
"We blew a couple of tries early on in the second half but kept plugging away and did it right at the end."
After flirting in the outside backs, Guyton, who is in his third year with the side, now finds himself in the second five-eighth position.
He said the team was starting to gel after a slow start.
"Time together helps. We had a lot of new faces, young guys, and it took a while to get used to each other. You've got to learn to stick with the game plan if you want to learn to win at this level."
Guyton hails from Waimate, but went to Shirley Boys' High School in Christchurch before finishing off at Nelson College.
With nothing happening rugby-wise in Nelson after leaving school, Guyton, who had family in North Otago, decided to make the trip south.
He has never looked back, making the Heartland Championship squad last year.