jsanderson5110
Hatching
- Sep 1, 2018
- 2
- 15
- 9
Hi, I'm new to this forum. I have chickens and quail, but my concern is for my quail.
We bought about 20 eggs from a quail farmer near where we live. We successfully hatched about 16 of them, and long story short, we are down to 7 -- 3 males and 4 females.
One male quail is separate from the flock because we suspect he will be killed. We've tried reintroducing him but the other males won't have him. Having 2 males to 4 females seems to be working for us now. I'm not sure what to do with the extra roo.
We only have one female laying right now, and that's every other day or so. The food we feed them is around 22% protein. The cage they are in is big enough and they get enough light during the day.
Another concern I have is two of our females have crooked necks. I assumed when they hatched that it was a genetic thing and there wasn't anything I could do about it. We are raising the quail for eggs so I wasn't concerned about the breeding option but those hens aren't actually laying at all.
The quail are 12 weeks old. I'm ready to throw in the towel -- I don't want to kill them and eat them and I can probably give them away but I know that no one probably wants the crooked neck ones.
I really wanted to start this as a hobby since I love birds. But through natural selection (too many roos killed each other to even out the ratio - bad luck) and a black snake incident (he ate all the eggs, ate two quail, and killed two more), I am emotionally exhausted and in dire need of answers, or validation that I can either start over or just be done and just focus on our chickens.
We bought about 20 eggs from a quail farmer near where we live. We successfully hatched about 16 of them, and long story short, we are down to 7 -- 3 males and 4 females.
One male quail is separate from the flock because we suspect he will be killed. We've tried reintroducing him but the other males won't have him. Having 2 males to 4 females seems to be working for us now. I'm not sure what to do with the extra roo.
We only have one female laying right now, and that's every other day or so. The food we feed them is around 22% protein. The cage they are in is big enough and they get enough light during the day.
Another concern I have is two of our females have crooked necks. I assumed when they hatched that it was a genetic thing and there wasn't anything I could do about it. We are raising the quail for eggs so I wasn't concerned about the breeding option but those hens aren't actually laying at all.
The quail are 12 weeks old. I'm ready to throw in the towel -- I don't want to kill them and eat them and I can probably give them away but I know that no one probably wants the crooked neck ones.
I really wanted to start this as a hobby since I love birds. But through natural selection (too many roos killed each other to even out the ratio - bad luck) and a black snake incident (he ate all the eggs, ate two quail, and killed two more), I am emotionally exhausted and in dire need of answers, or validation that I can either start over or just be done and just focus on our chickens.