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I was thinking about your issue in more depth when i was up watching my quails. And this may be impossible for you however I wanted to let you know about it just incase.
If you are able to cover them up, so they don't get 14+ hours of light a day, the crowing should shush up soon. Its the lighting that makes them crow and puts them into breeding mode. Shade probably wouldnt help this, however if they are in a dim area where they arent seeing real light (like winter time-ness lol) they could be forced to stop crowing that way. Worth a shot
Yeah that is a good idea, i'll have to try that. But he even crows early in the morning when its still dark out so i'm sure making the pen dark might work, but i'll try. I'll just have to pair him up.
Thanks Again for your help, i appreciate it!!
It's hard to explain, I know that doesnt make sense with him crowing even at dark but I'll try to explain it better. But yes i agree giving them some hens will really fix the problem lol!
Coturnix quail that are not under 14 hours of light a day will not go into breeding mode no matter the season, just like how a plant wont grow well without light. If they dont have that exact or over 14 hours of light they just sort of eat and sleep and act like birds wihtout the mating aspect. It normally takes 2 weeks of 14hours a day of light for the birds to come into breeding mode. Put it this way, if I gave you two batches of 4 week old coturnix quail, and you kept one batch in your basement with no lighting on them.... and you put teh other birds outside during this spring weather... in 2 weeks the outside ones would be making an uproar, and the ones in teh basement would just still act like normal chicks and not even crowing.
During mating season Coturnix roos are known to crow all night long even!
I'm not sure if i've made any sense here, but im just trying to say that it's not teh "now" light that makes them crow, it's specific prolonged days of light that makes them crow.
So if you take away the prolonged lighting over a period of about a week or two the roos should stop. However that's probably more work than it needs to be haha so yes hens woul dhelp the problem a lot