dustingebhardt
Chirping
Does anyone have any recommendations on how to manage the growing out and harvesting of roughly 100 quail?
I have an outdoor aviary where my all of my quail older than 2-3 weeks live. I hatch out a batch of roughly 30-35 quail every 3 weeks. So far, my aviary has my original batch from JMF, plus roughly 30-35 each of 3 additional hatchings. This weekend I plan on harvesting most of the adult males. But since everyone is mixed together, I'm concerned that I might overdo it and harvest too many of the breeding males. Should I separate several of the males in a small cage so that I ensure that I leave enough to continue their breeding? Since I plan on keeping roughly 40 adult hens, I suppose that would equate to roughly 7-10 adult roos.
Does anyone have recommendations on how to identify and manage each "generation" of birds? I tried using #4 leg rings, but most of them fell off. I'm thinking of using colored zip ties, but I'm struggling to find more than 3 colors.
What would a good schedule for harvesting be? My initial thoughts are to harvest the males at roughly 10 weeks of age. I would also harvest the newly adult females at the same time, once I have enough layers to keep on producing enough eggs. I'm not sure when the females stop laying, but I could harvest the elderly hens at some point (8 months? 12 months?). I also want to separate the older birds from the younger birds when storing them after hatching. I can then use the older, tougher birds for stews and slow-cooker recipes, and use the younger birds for roasting and such.
So, my aviary population currently looks like this:
Original batch: roughly 10 females and 3 males. (I had already harvested 10 males).
Batch #1: Age 11 weeks. I need to harvest all the males. Roughly 15 each, males and females.
Batch #2: Age 8 weeks. Harvest the males in 3 weeks. Leave the females. Roughly 15 each, males and females.
Batch #3: Age 5 week. Harvest in 5 weeks. Harvest all males and females (or leave roughly 45-50 total adult females).
Batch #4: Age 2 weeks. harvest all males and females in 8 weeks.
Batch #5 is in the incubator now, due to hatch in 4 days.
I have an outdoor aviary where my all of my quail older than 2-3 weeks live. I hatch out a batch of roughly 30-35 quail every 3 weeks. So far, my aviary has my original batch from JMF, plus roughly 30-35 each of 3 additional hatchings. This weekend I plan on harvesting most of the adult males. But since everyone is mixed together, I'm concerned that I might overdo it and harvest too many of the breeding males. Should I separate several of the males in a small cage so that I ensure that I leave enough to continue their breeding? Since I plan on keeping roughly 40 adult hens, I suppose that would equate to roughly 7-10 adult roos.
Does anyone have recommendations on how to identify and manage each "generation" of birds? I tried using #4 leg rings, but most of them fell off. I'm thinking of using colored zip ties, but I'm struggling to find more than 3 colors.
What would a good schedule for harvesting be? My initial thoughts are to harvest the males at roughly 10 weeks of age. I would also harvest the newly adult females at the same time, once I have enough layers to keep on producing enough eggs. I'm not sure when the females stop laying, but I could harvest the elderly hens at some point (8 months? 12 months?). I also want to separate the older birds from the younger birds when storing them after hatching. I can then use the older, tougher birds for stews and slow-cooker recipes, and use the younger birds for roasting and such.
So, my aviary population currently looks like this:
Original batch: roughly 10 females and 3 males. (I had already harvested 10 males).
Batch #1: Age 11 weeks. I need to harvest all the males. Roughly 15 each, males and females.
Batch #2: Age 8 weeks. Harvest the males in 3 weeks. Leave the females. Roughly 15 each, males and females.
Batch #3: Age 5 week. Harvest in 5 weeks. Harvest all males and females (or leave roughly 45-50 total adult females).
Batch #4: Age 2 weeks. harvest all males and females in 8 weeks.
Batch #5 is in the incubator now, due to hatch in 4 days.