Don’t worry about your male. He will start trying to do his job soon. From my experience they will literally flip a switch one day and it will be obnoxiously obvious. I do caution you if you only have one male and one female. He will most likely over breed her and can actually hurt her. I had...
I had one roo with two hens. He absolutely tore them up. So he had to go. I then started having the two hens go broody and start hurting each other. They now have a wire grate separating them. They can see each other and that’s all they care about. Quail are vicious little birds lol.
Well they have been back together for almost a day and no fighting. Maybe these four or five days apart really made the difference. I’m still keeping a sharp eye on them as we all know, quail can turn on a dime
I’m highly considering keeping them separated. I don’t want to put them back together and with a hour have the same issue of fighting. They get very territorial against each other.
I take them up almost as soon as they lay them. They typically lay in The evening after work so I check in the them grab them after they lay. They have been very vocal today since I separated them. They are not happy. But, I’d rather them heal and not hurt each other….
I have two 4 month old coturnix hens and they have gotten along great. Yesterday I noticed one had been scalped by the other one. I treated the wound and they calmed down and didn’t do anything else. Today the one that had gotten scalped, had tried to scalp the other one! I have separated them...
I used neosporin on the wound my bird had. Wether or not you are supposed to use that on birds idk… but it seemed to have really helped keep the spot clean and it did not get infected.
Sounds like he is really overbreeding them. I’d recommend either removing him and let him live out his days or let him go to the freezer. If you’re not needing him for fertilized eggs, the hens don’t need a roo to lay. I had a roo literally peck a hole in the side of one of my hens head and I...
I’ve been thinking about raising a few more quail to get my egg production up a little bit.Once new birds are old enough to go in with the current birds, should I make a divider in their enclosure and let them get used to each other then after a few days remove the divider? I know how...
I waited until mine were 6 weeks and I use the Sweet PDZ and put in a little bit of food grade diatomaceous earth to assist in bug control. The sweet pdz is all natural and a deodorizer so what they knock out of the box is helping the droppings not smell so bad. I usually top it off once a week.
I have the exact one and love it for my birds. The only modifications I made are I put 1/2” hardware cloth on the floor and the metal door to keep predators out and I also use spring clips on the latches because they don’t work too well on staying shut. At one time I had four quail it in without...
last Tuesday I got my first egg and today my other hen joined in the fun of laying her first egg. I actually got one of the hens laying on video as I have a camera inside their hutch to monitor food and water as well as them during the day when I’m away. Anyways….. both hens laid an egg within 2...
Quail are their own bird that’s for sure… If I were in your shoes and already had that enclosure then I’d certainly give it a try before I went out and spent the money on something new. As others have said, make sure unwanted vermin can’t get in from the ground level. Like digging in and such.
That would work fine. They might actually use the ramp and upper portion. My parents quail have the same type of setup and they use the ramp and go up into the house part. I don’t know if they roost up there but they do use it.