I wanna thank everyone especially
@Jener8or for helping me with my first batch of quails, they're thriving! They're currently 25~ days old and weighting around 130g (some of them 160-180g) and I only had one die ever since I started using pine shavings (he goy sick from the Wheat hay and didn't make it)
That's great! I'm sorry you lost one to the wheat hay, even though I said it might be worth trying. I'm so glad they are doing well!
But now I hope you can help me further with some of the questions I got:
1- When can I start hatching their eggs after they start laying? Can i hatch the very first eggs or should I wait a while?
I usually wait a couple weeks just to let them work the kinks out of laying and for fertility's sake (but it doesn't hurt to try to hatch them.)
2- How can I save on pine shavings? They're needing a lot of it and it's quite expensive, I'm good brooding lil chicks on shavings but now that they're big is there an alternative? Can I put them on solid concrete? Or is wire the only option?
Are you able to keep them outdoors? I have a group in a tractor and I just move them around, or you could build them an aviary-type enclosure.
You just want a structure with a ceiling no more than a foot or so high or taller than 6' because they can flush when they get scared and hit the ceiling and hurt or terminate themselves.
I also keep some on wire, and will put the a-frame tractor on wire as well during winter. I use the 1/2" green vinyl-coated hardware cloth on the floor, and regular hardware cloth on the sides.
Solid concrete might be okay if you put some other substrate on top. Instead of pine shavings, can you get pine bark or wood chips?
3- Do I need to vaccinate? I plan on keeping them in the room/coop I built for them (maybe in the future i could build a run for them tonfree range not sure if quail do free ranging)
I don't vaccinate my quail. It could be a regional-specific thing, where you may want to, but mine seem to do fine without any.
They will run away if you "free-range" them. You definitely need them in an enclosure of some kind, like I mentioned above.
Some of them can fly pretty well, especially the smaller ones, so you would want a really tall fence (probably taller than 8' or so, but even that might not be tall enough) and/or an aviary-type ceiling.
4- I'm feeding them 22% protein chick starter and we have 19% protein second stage feed, do I switch to 19% or keep feeding them 22% their whole life?
I think 19% will be fine once they are close to laying age like 7 or 8 weeks old. You can still supply them with grit (sorry I forgot you can't get any, but some from the environment would be fine), and if it's not layer feed, some oyster shell during laying season.