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Yes, dam you got good eyes man, its a 50, its a shooter. My brother a I both have matching 50's. Just like Jeremiah Johnson's!!! One of the best movies of all time.... Kin you skin bar pilgrim? Bill
Jeremiah Johnson is required viewing in our household at least once a year. It is where we live. So when you watch it..all that scenery is where Tonya lives.
High desert, hugging the mountains close by. Elk, coyote, puma, bobcat, black bear, coons, skunk, etc. A bit off topic from the hatch along... but that is where one of the hatch alongers lives...Jeremiah Johnson territory
. Learned every thing I know from my step dad who IS Jeremiah from trapping, to working with him packing mules on a mule train up above tree line, skinning logs for camp etc.
One reason I like these Coturnix so much. They are so sustainable with their reproduction rate, feed conversion, personality. Good for this region which has short growing season, cold and heat extremes, deep snow years and drought years off and on, over and over. Hard to believe they hadn't been popular before.
Wonder if we are seeing a new trend. Are Quail a new trend in sustainable small scale farming? Particularly in a place like where I live. Or is the southwest finally catching up to what the east has known all along? Interesting. Sorry to muck up the hatch along thread, but that is the spirit of the thing.
Spreading the news, sharing the knowledge and doing it together comparing notes. I need to go back and answer Model A's primary questions at the beginning of the thread on hatching history experience...
Be back soon with that.
Tonya
My thought is that in a lot of urban homesteads ducks and chickens are not allowed but it says nothing about quail. Example where I live I may have 4 hens, but nothing is said on quails. So I have my 2 banty chickens, and neatly stacked weekly cleaned quail pens. So If i want meat grown on site it's quail. Now we're currently shopping for the right 5-10 acres, and when we do, i'll still have a bunch of quail, they're enjoyable, we love thier "song" (crowing) and for a bird my 7 year old can do the work on.