Thank you. Just got done vent sexing them & I have 15 males & 5 females
Am hoping that I am wrong & more females will turn up..?

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Really? I know they like hiding in things, I thought they'd like it up there, plus the nesting boxes.The quail will probably not use the upstairs part, but it might make a good food store...
The quail will probably not use the upstairs part, but it might make a good food store...
Really? I know they like hiding in things, I thought they'd like it up there, plus the nesting boxes.
How many can I fit in there comfortably until processing, than how many girls can I keep in there for layers???
I really need to know how many I can keep and how many I can rehome.
Thanks!
They like to hide in things that are small, to them being inside the chicken house bit would not be like hiding, it would just be being in a place they couldn't see out of. We use "Playstix" which are wooden sticks put together on bendy wire, so we bend them into tunnels, they like those. Also guinea pig shelters, and old 6 inch pipe, stuff like that.
I am not sure how many you could keep in there. We have approx 1 quail per 4 square foot in our aviary, but we could fit more in, maybe up to 10 in our 3x6 foot section. less than 1 per square foot because when they're on the ground not raised wire there is a lot of poop if you go 1 per square foot. I would also put some kind of substrate over the bottom wire layer, to absorb the poop and to make it kinder on their feet if you don't intend to move the coop. I assume you won't be moving it as it looks heavy. If you are going to move it then provide areas where they can get off the wire to rest their feet and you'll need to move it about once a fortnight I'd have thought.
Looking at the picture I'd think you could probably get about 8 quail in there quite happily as adults. If you put them all in there at 4 weeks old (when they come off the heat) then let them grow out in there, you will be able to pull some out and butcher them as you see fit, and eventually you'll be able to judge whether or not they have enough space.
You can rake the substrate over about once a month (judging by our set up, maybe more often with more birds) to mix in the poop, and remove it all together after about 3 months (makes great compost) and replace it.
If you leave it bare wire, you could hose it into the grass or whatever is underneath, but you'd need to move it regularly to let the grass recover.
Also, in my experience, they will lay anywhere except in nesting boxes. They will lay in their hidy holes though. Egg hunting is a fun pass time once you get the hang of checking each of their regular egg spots
How many eggs did you order? Remember that they won't all hatch (in all likelihood) and about half will be males (maybe more if you're unlucky). 8 may sound like not many but during summer that's 8 eggs per day, 56 eggs per week (minus the off day off), they will soon stack up and you'll be giving them away just to get rid of them.
I hope this helps![]()