My Quail pen is almost ready and a question.

Deegie

Songster
6 Years
Apr 30, 2018
53
110
146
Climax Springs, MO
Hello,

I recently was given 16 young Coturnix quail. I don't know how old they are but I was told they are about half-grown. They are not quite as big as the full-grown birds I have seen but almost. Anyway, I have been working hard on getting an outdoor aviary ready for them. I would have been ready before I picked them up but I thought I was getting 4 birds. I was ready for 4 birds.
So we built a big run for them. It is 5 X 10 feet and is made from a chain-link dog pen. We lined the entire thing with 1/2" hardware cloth. I am posting some pics for you to see. We looked into making one from wood but the price of wood is just crazy these days. We ran the hardware cloth under the pen and out 8" or so and then covered it with 12" square concrete pavers. They weigh 15 pounds each. We believe this will keep anything from digging under the fence. The small holes of the hardware cloth should keep the snakes out. We have a lot of snakes in the woods and we feel that beating the woods back from the homestead is a full-time job.
We even decided to use hardware cloth for the ceiling. A friend just used bird netting for theirs and an owl managed to tear a hole in it and get in during the night. It couldn't get back out but it killed many birds. Anyway, my question is this. I used some wire to 'seam' the sections of hardware cloth together on the ceiling of the pen. I did so as well on the walls but I was able to tie it on the outside so there are no sharp ends where the birds may get to them. On the ceiling, however, even though I tried to tuck the ends up through the mesh it does not want to stay and results in a hanging twist of wire in several places on the ceiling of the aviary. I have attached some photos showing the pen and wire twists in question. I would like to know if anyone thinks they are a hazard to the birds. If I really have to, remove them and try something different. I know they fly straight up when startled but I am not sure if they bounce up 6 feet high.
I have also included some photos of the door in case someone is interested in duplicating this pen. In order to block all access to snakes, I had to overlap hardware cloth on the inside of the gate opening. The gate opens outward and when closed is held against the overlapped sections. I also added a 1-foot hight section across the bottom of the gate that prevents birds from running out and prevents snakes from coming in. Hardware cloth could not be added to the gate end in the same way we added it to the other walls. We did put it on the inside to prevent raccoons from pulling it off. I still need to put the hardware cloth on the gate. It will be added to the outside of the gate and will only need to extend beyond the gate at the top since the bottom and sides have already been taken care of. The only place on this pen that has a hole bigger than 1/2" X 1/2" is right beside the gate latch and we had to leave some area free to allow the latch to move up and down freely.

Thank you for looking and for helping me decide if the wire twists are a hazard.

Deegie
 

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Look at j clips for attaching the hardware cloth. It's what we use to build rabbit cages. It won't attach it to the chain link but it will attach it on the roof edge to edge with out having the sharp bits. On the sides of my chain link chicken run I used bailing wire in the same method. Tied on from the outside so no pointed tails inside the coop.

I'm 6 ft 2 and those in the roof would drive me nuts.
 
Your aviary looks awesome! No, I would not be at all concerned about that. Can you post a picture of the quail. If they are jumbo wilds (the most widespread among quail owners). They won't be able to fly very high. Even a smaller quail probably won't. Ive had few really small quail in my aviary and then fly off to the sides. I don't think you should be concerned. Good luck with your quail keeping!


P.S. You could just file them down a bit so they aren't sharp if your really concerned about it.
 
Look at j clips for attaching the hardware cloth. It's what we use to build rabbit cages. It won't attach it to the chain link but it will attach it on the roof edge to edge with out having the sharp bits. On the sides of my chain link chicken run I used bailing wire in the same method. Tied on from the outside so no pointed tails inside the coop.

I'm 6 ft 2 and those in the roof would drive me nuts.
I will see if I can find what you are talking about. I am only 5'2" so they are way over my head. hahaha - But I can see how they would be an issue for my hubby.
 
I see lots of open squares that the birds will go for when spooked or just curious. If they can't fit oit, they can get stuck wish isn't any better
I think the open squares you are referring to are on the gate. Which, as I stated, is not yet done. I probably should have completed it before posting the photos but I wanted advice on the ceiling section and patience has never been my strong suit. :gig
 
I would be surprised if there were injuries from the wire. You could fold and bend the ends in to round them. If you are really sweating the wire twists, use cable ties. Just use the ones that are UV safe. They're black. That's what I did anyway.

My aviary is a similar concept. It's a regular outdoor bird aviary that I covered with hardware cloth on the top, bottom, sides & door. I went with 1/4" for the floor and the first 3' then changed it to 1/2". Wanted to be sure no mice made it in. There is occasional evidence of mice around the outside, but so far the inside has been fine.
 
I think the open squares you are referring to are on the gate. Which, as I stated, is not yet done. I probably should have completed it before posting the photos but I wanted advice on the ceiling section and patience has never been my strong suit. :gig
Ah, okay, my bad must have missed that part. I would see if there's any way to make the gap between the fence and the gate smaller or covered partly. Again, less places for them to get stuck
 
That looks quite nice to me. At 6' in height, you are unlikely to get any injuries when your quail flush. I agree with others that have said that you might want to file down any sharp edges.

Add a few boxes and things for the birds to hide in, and they will be in quail heaven.
 

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