Quote:
ROFL, I must like working! Lessee, A 10 yo DD, a 17 month old DS, 2 young workingbred dogs, 2 goats, 6 cats, 2 budgies, a small herd of rabbits; 4 does, 2 bucks, currently 8 buns and expecting. I quit counting the chickens, but am building and setting up breeding pens so I'll have point-of-lay pullets to sell in spring. And if I called it remodeling the house, it would imply that the house was a finished construct in the first place ...
I'll be keeping the quail indoors so just having poo drop through won't really be an option. What my plan is, to build a kind of shelving unit. 8' long, 2' wide and tall enough for 3, 12" high cages and rubbermaid totes at the bottom. Built for removable dividers every 2 feet. I'd line the shelves with linoleum, happily I have access to a free, unlimited supply of well-aged sawdust or shavings (my choice) for bedding. I've found that if you don't use so much bedding that the stingiest part of you feels a little like you're wasting it then you're actually not using enough. A dustpan makes an admirable cage scraper and the rubbermaid totes will hold worm colonies. I actually like to keep my rabbits in cages like that when I can (but taller) I loose less first litters with solid floors.
I think that something like that would fit more quail then I'd ever actually put in them. Is there any reason it would be a bad set-up besides that most people don't manage that way? To me, wrestling drop pans and scraping bottom wire feels like so much more work.
LOL, and I spend way too much of my time playing with poo! But then, I've got a 50' x 65' garden that will eat every bit of it. I even haul poo home from the neighbors.
Has anyone here ever tried pickled quail eggs? My couple of pets didn't give me enough to bother with (DD ate them all) but if I'm going to have a decent number of quail I'd like to try it.
Here are some of my thoughts on this...
"8 buns and expecting" -- are the bunnies expecting, or are you?
If you are expecting, I'd put off the quail project for a while. Wait til after the baby is here & you are past the initial exhaustion.
If you have a place outside where you can keep coturnix, then that is far preferable. It will make the workload MUCH less for you. Even outside up against one side of the house, with an overhang, would be better. Mine are inside because it's the best option I have at the moment.
Keeping up with the clean-up can be quite a bit of work. Right now, I would not be comfortable taking a big vacation, unless my son wanted to stay home and take care of things. I love travel, so this is an issue. It sort of restricts you to the local area. I can't ask someone else to come in and clean cages inside. I could ask someone to feed and water if they were outside. Cleanup is different.
If you do keep them inside, strongly consider wire bottoms. In fact, I'd construct the cages so that even the wire bottoms are in frames that can slide out. Underneath those, have WELL MADE trays that are LIGHTWEIGHT and slide out easily. For indoor birds, you'll want extra space per bird to help minimize the poo concentration. Not to be gross, but when people keep 1 bird for every square foot, the poo sort of piles up in a heap. It will insulate the poop underneath it and the whole mess will remain moist longer. If the birds have more space -- say 3-4 square feet per bird, then the poo is more spread out. It dries quickly. Dry poo smells less than wet poo (though keep in mind that the ammonia that evaporates off went into the air in your house or wherever they are). I definitely want my birds to have enough room that the waste is spread out. Each day, you'll want to pull trays and scrape. You won't want to skip days. Further, if you are sick or dealing with sick children, you'll need backup. Who will scrape if you can't? Cause you can't let this go for a few days while you recover and if you are down with influenza, you won't be scraping cages. If they are outdoors, someone can feed & water, but the cleaning can be let go for a few days.
By making the wire bottoms removable, as well (my plan for my next project.), you can also remove these to clean them more thoroughly outside every so often. Not everything falls through the wire...
If you decide to go with bedding in the cage, be aware that coturnix are VERY messy. You can scoop like a cat pan daily, but it is virtually non-stop. I have never counted specifically but it's my estimate that each bird goes at least 10,998 times per day. (Or, okay, something like at least 20 or 30 times...) So, if you have 10 birds, you'll be using your plastic scoop 200-300 times to scoop a cage. That's a lot of poo scooping. That is the SOLE reason some of my birds are on wire & I'm considering wire for more of them, even though I detest it.