Coturnix Quail Basics- Information and Pictures Galore

My quail are doing great. Some are going on 5 weeks old. When should hey start to lay? At what age are they ready to harvest. I have 12 now ranging from 5-3 weeks of age. I want to keep a couple of roos and hens to go with them. What is the recommended ratio? How much room do I need to provide for them? Do I need to keep each roo separated. I'm going to assume they should not be allowed to free range if I ever want to see them again...


You should not put them on the ground at all. I looked into retiring a favorite female to grass, because of her feet not holding up on wire. (She is an older breeder I bought as an adult and has not laid even one egg since she came to me 3 months ago. She was one of my first and boy did that awful woman I bought them from see me coming. *Sigh*) Anyway, putting her on grass would have killed her because quail are highly susceptible to parasites in the ground. They really ought to be on wire for ease of cleaning. if you give them a sand/dust bath if gives them somewhere to go where they are not on wire. Giving them a sand bath box is also great entertainment, you may just have to cancel your satellite TV ;) I also give the older ones some newspaper to rest on. That older female will be dinner one of these days, sadly. Shame on me for getting attached. I personally haven't had trouble keeping males together if they are all males from the same hatch and never separated, with 3 females per male. I had 5 females and 5 males in my jumbos and I will try to only cull 3 males but if there is trouble I have an extra cage to put a roo in. (Always have backups!) Since that is all the Jumbos I have (for now, more are on the way!) that pen will be 5:2 females to males.

The females may lay as early as 6 weeks, but may not start until 8 weeks. The first few eggs from new layers are not generally hatched because they tend to have low fertility. Quail Jailer is doing a hatch project with some *brand spanking new* layers. Most people harvest at 6-8 weeks.

Quail don't need much space. I keep up to 10 in a converted rabbit hutch, (i just put a net in about 6" from the top inside so they bounce if they spook and flush) but you could probably keep twice that many in the same space. I just don't like feeling like a factory run operation.

If you haven't yet, I highly recommend you quail-proof the area you keep your pens in. I have 1" chicken wire all the way around mine now, last week one of my Pharaoh's got out and slipped through the chain link into my (feuding) neighbor's property. I had to dive over the fence with my hubby's fishing net and catch her. Thankfully the neighbor did not see me, but I am too old and (dare I say) fat to be hopping fences and chasing stupid little birds. As soon as I was done gently chiding my miscreant I got to laying chicken wire all the way around that place and even put in a 6' tall chain link gate, with 1" chicken wire on the bottom.

Did I answer everything? I hope so! Enjoy them...
 
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While there are disease concerns with keeping them on the ground in certain areas, it is not a death sentence or anything. I'm going on my 8th generation of ground birds, but I also keep their cage clean and they have 4" of sand between them and my native soil. You have to make sure the ground drains well and if you really concerned you should worm your quail. You can keep them on the ground without them getting disease but you should always be prepared to treat disease anyway, since it can come from something as simple as eating a house fly. I've been raising my breeders on sand since I started with coturnix about 5 years ago, and they've never contracted any illness or parasites. I cover them during the rains and make sure ants, snails, slugs, and earth worms aren't too available since those are all potential sources of parasites.

Short story, there is nothing wrong with keeping coturnix on the ground as long the soil is dry and drains well, and there aren't an excess of insects available to the birds. It actually generates a less stressed and better looking bird.






1" chicken wire is perfect for raccoons to pull quail right through. You might want to read my threads about that.

https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/872329/you-think-your-cages-are-predator-proof

https://www.backyardchickens.com/t/...ve-such-an-easy-time-with-quail#post_13392391
 
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What do you use for the hens to lay in. I wasn't prepared for them to be such tame and gentle birds. I can pet and pick them up and they just look up at me when I come in the tool room where I'm keeping them and all of my other brooders with chicks in them. About a year ago a friend gave me 2 quail chicks and they were wild and would escape every time I opened the brooder to feed them. I gave them back. I traded these for turkey eggs and they came tame. I don't know how I will ever be able to kill them to eat. Then again I have a couple of roosters who really need it and they are still running around with their bad attitudes. Guess its time for me to suck it up... I told a friend I would take her daughters rabbit and hutch because they are moving the rabbit may get some company. I have noticed they are smellier than chicks.
 
Coturnix quail will rarely set eggs, they just lay the eggs where ever they please. Usually on the wire, sometimes in the feed trough, sometimes in the sand box. (wish I could teach them to always lay in the sand box! haha.) If yours are tame that is great, and rather rare. I encourage that.
 
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Ahh, gotcha, I got one in the ref that except for the shape it looks like Jupiter. My wife is cooking and picked it up, looked at it and said "I don't like that one"

Poor Jupiter


Course that's like the reason sharks won't eat people dressed as clowns....They're afraid they'll taste funny.
 

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