"Quail Thread-Hatching, Mutations, and everything quail related!!!"

I use 99.5 degrees for the incubation period and 45% humidity. For hatching, I go with 99 degrees and 55-60% humidity.
 
I use 99.5 degrees for the incubation period and 45% humidity. For hatching, I go with 99 degrees and 55-60% humidity.
 
I am hunting for some unusual colored quail and I like to hatch the eggs. Here are some of my prettier birds

I'm getting one of the above colored quail from my normally colored brown coturnix out of every 30 or so quail I hatch. I've kept one who is now just under 5 weeks old, it appears to be a cock. I'll try to get a photo of mine today.

What should I do with the color? Give him some hens and keep their eggs separate when hatching? Should I be aiming to get a breeding trio of all this color? Is it a bad idea to mix this color in with the normally colored brown?

I had sold all the others as when people come to pick up their quail chicks of course they always want the odd colored one! I'd let them go as they weren't growing as fast as the normal browns. But I decided to keep one from my last hatch. I need to get weights on them but it appears it has caught up in size and possibly even passed some, and I always try to keep only the largest chicks.

I'm thinking one of my breeding pens must have a cock and possibly only one hen carrying this color gene. Since all my original breeders are getting older I decided I should keep one to keep the color in case I want it in the future. Although more of the offspring from my original breeders should be carrying the gene too.

On another note.... So far my experience has been that my cocks start crowing and mounting the hens at 36-37 days old and the hens start laying at 37-39 days old.
 
Last edited:
I'm getting one of the above colored quail from my normally colored brown coturnix out of every 30 or so quail I hatch. I've kept one who is now just under 5 weeks old, it appears to be a cock. I'll try to get a photo of mine today.

What should I do with the color? Give him some hens and keep their eggs separate when hatching? Should I be aiming to get a breeding trio of all this color? Is it a bad idea to mix this color in with the normally colored brown?

I had sold all the others as when people come to pick up their quail chicks of course they always want the odd colored one! I'd let them go as they weren't growing as fast as the normal browns. But I decided to keep one from my last hatch. I need to get weights on them but it appears it has caught up in size and possibly even passed some, and I always try to keep only the largest chicks.

I'm thinking one of my breeding pens must have a cock and possibly only one hen carrying this color gene. Since all my original breeders are getting older I decided I should keep one to keep the color in case I want it in the future. Although more of the offspring from my original breeders should be carrying the gene too.

On another note.... So far my experience has been that my cocks start crowing and mounting the hens at 36-37 days old and the hens start laying at 37-39 days old.
amazing beautiful color
 
I also heard that if you put button eggs under a broody hen like a silkie shed teach them a lot of things even bring back the instinct of breeding and incubating!
 
I'm getting one of the above colored quail from my normally colored brown coturnix out of every 30 or so quail I hatch. I've kept one who is now just under 5 weeks old, it appears to be a cock. I'll try to get a photo of mine today.

What should I do with the color? Give him some hens and keep their eggs separate when hatching? Should I be aiming to get a breeding trio of all this color? Is it a bad idea to mix this color in with the normally colored brown?

I had sold all the others as when people come to pick up their quail chicks of course they always want the odd colored one! I'd let them go as they weren't growing as fast as the normal browns. But I decided to keep one from my last hatch. I need to get weights on them but it appears it has caught up in size and possibly even passed some, and I always try to keep only the largest chicks.

I'm thinking one of my breeding pens must have a cock and possibly only one hen carrying this color gene. Since all my original breeders are getting older I decided I should keep one to keep the color in case I want it in the future. Although more of the offspring from my original breeders should be carrying the gene too.

On another note.... So far my experience has been that my cocks start crowing and mounting the hens at 36-37 days old and the hens start laying at 37-39 days old.
he is pretty try to breed him with colors like his or completely white ones and see what come out.
 
I have a batch of bobwhites hatching today, and so far I have 4/12 of them with curled toes. What variable could be responsible for this?
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom