NZ Lifestyle Block

Your Poultry The little bird laying golden eggs

These tiny birds are the easiest and most efficient producers of eggs and meat you can raise.

- Words Sheryn Dean

Even when I'm old and in a retirement village, I'll have a covey of quails hidden in a corner somewhere. Japanese quail are tiny, a puffball of feathers with head and legs. But they produce way above their weight, laying 300 eggs per year. If they don't (or are males and can't), they take just 5 minutes to butcher and taste delicious.

I think quail are like miniature chickens, but better. They're more productive and the easiest of all poultry in terms of care and housing. Most importantl­y, they taste better, although you do need a bird (or two) per person per meal. Six birds are ample for two adults.

I use three quail eggs to replace a chicken egg, but the increased nutrients and novelty outweighs any inconvenie­nce.

I love tiny breakfast sausages accompanie­d by tiny fried eggs or bite-size Scotch eggs. My favourite ‘bring a plate' dish to events is devilled quail eggs: tasty, simple to eat, impressive, and almost no effort.

In the wild, quail have quite a short life span, just 2-3 years, but most never reach old age. Predators love them, and their only recourse is to run and hide. To sustain their numbers, they breed and reach maturity quite quickly, growing from a bumblebee-sized chick to an edible bird in just 4-5 weeks. The hens start laying aged just 6-10 weeks. However, they rarely go broody as they've been domesticat­ed for so long, they've lost the instinct. That's good if you want eggs, but not so good if you want to breed them. For that, you'll need an incubator.

They take just 5 minutes to process and taste delicious.

Where to find quail

Hatching eggs are often for sale on TradeMe, and you can find live birds for $5-$15 each (depending on their age). There are also farmers around NZ who sell eggs at farmers' markets. Options include: www.backyardfa­rmer.co.nz (Dunedin) www.manurau.co.nz (Hawkes Bay)

Housing

Quail are easy to care for, which is why I'm such a fan. My six birds live in a round cage 1.5m across (pictured on page 53). I've seen pictures of them kept in raised cages in apartments.

The cage fits my 1.5m-wide circular raised vegetable beds. I rotate the quail around the unused beds over winter. It's close to the back door, warmer, and easy to provide extra light (which keeps them laying, see page 54).

In summer, when I want the gardens to grow vegetables, I have the cage sitting under the shade of the orchard trees and move it each day.

Quail don't scratch up the ground like chickens and don't eat a lot of greens. They love hunting for worms and bugs, enjoy the security of grass clumps (or overgrown lettuce) to hide under, and produce a lot of fertiliser (poo).

Commercial­ly, the minimum space requiremen­t for quails is 145cm² (12cm x 12cm) when they're on a barn floor and 125cm² in cages, but this is a tiny space. My cage is 1.7m² – if my garden beds were bigger, I would prefer to give them more space. The cage is big enough for one male (I don't add other males or they'd fight) and up to five females.

I collect the eggs through a hatch in the top.

The only problem with my cage is it's 30cm high, which I now know is too low. When frightened, quail fly vertically and can injure themselves, hitting their heads on the roof.

A run needs big plants so birds can hide under them and shelter. I've found little houses or warm snug, nesting boxes are simply ignored. Quails naturally run and hide and don't like a space with no exit as a predator could trap them in it.

Quail are the only gamebird reared and farmed intensivel­y worldwide for both eggs and as table birds.

Feed

Their natural diet is mostly seeds and insects, and you can buy specialist gamebird feeds suitable for quail.

Newly hatched chicks eat around 10g a day, rising to 50g per day for a mature adult laying hen.

It’s best to start the chicks on a chick starter crumble, ground up in a blender.

Another option is two parts crushed chick starter crumble to one-part blood and bone or a meat and bone mix. Blood and bone can be bought at garden centres, but check it’s pure, with no added fertiliser­s.

You can then change over to layer or meatbird crumbles mixed with blood and bone or meat and bone at the same ratio for adults.

My feeding regime was:

anything they could forage;

small bird seeds (which resulted in millet growing through the vegetable beds);

high protein meatbird crumble, put through the blender, mixed with meat and bone meal;

finely ground dry eggshells for extra calcium, about a teaspoon a day, dolloped on the ground (no more, or I found they would overdose on it).

I had a cuttlefish bone on the side of their cage for calcium and to keep their beaks trimmed, but they didn’t use it much.

Feeders & waterers

I provide feed ad lib in an old cat biscuit dispenser. The birds scratched the food out and pooed in it until I wired mesh over the tray so they could only peck at it. It works if it stays dry.

Chicks need a plastic tray covered in mesh. Plastic milk containers can be easily turned into feeders and customised for birds of different ages. You can get great instructio­ns and measuremen­ts from www.backyardfa­rmer.co.nz.

As with chickens, waterers for newly hatched chicks need to be very low-sided, flat, and filled with stones so the tiny chicks can’t drown. As they get bigger, cover waterers with mesh to prevent them from splashing it out or messing in it.

Care

Quails are one of the simplest and easiest birds to raise. The basic requiremen­ts are:

good food;

fresh water in clean containers;

a clean home;

a nice dust bath for feather care;

regular parasite control (Avitrol Plus, Aviverm).

My only issue has been overgrown beaks in a couple of birds. When it started affecting their ability to eat, I trimmed them with side-cutters (or you could use nail clippers).

You can have behavioura­l problems due to overcrowdi­ng and/or a lack of hiding places, with birds aggressive­ly featherpec­king each other. Mature males fight if they’re in a confined space or if there are females around. However, you can run male-only colonies quite successful­ly, which is good if you want them for meat.

Beware of predators. One night a stoat or ferret dug a tunnel under the side of my cage and killed all my birds.

Eggs & breeding

Quail hens pick a spot and usually return to lay in it each day. If you want to encourage that, always leave one egg for them to find when they return.

I put mesh over the feeder to stop birds from wasting feed and soiling in it.

Mine shunned all my attempts to provide any sort of nesting box but seemed to appreciate a bit of straw.

Although they mostly laid their eggs by mid-morning, they could and did lay anywhere, anytime. Hens in peak condition frequently laid more than one egg per day as production can be as fast as 18-20 hours (vs 24-26 for a chicken).

A quail will lay 250-320 eggs per year, weighing 6-16g (the average is 10g).

Japanese quail don’t go broody. They stop laying once daylight falls below 16 hours. You can extend their laying season by rigging up a low-wattage lightbulb on a timer.

Quail eggs can be incubated in any egg incubator, set at 37.5 °C with high humidity (70%). Eggs hatch at 17-18 days into teeny, tiny 6-7g balls of fluff. Brood the chicks at 38°C for the first few days, then gradually reduce it to ambient temperatur­e over 2-3 weeks.

Sorting the boys from the girls

Japanese quail come in a range of colours. 'Wild' or pharaoh is common. The male's chest feathers are a plain reddish colour versus the female's dark mottled spots speckled over a light cream background. You'll be able to distinguis­h their colouring, and their sex when they're about four weeks old.

Adult female birds are also larger than the males, by about 30-40g or so.

You can also sex them at maturity, aged about 8-10 weeks, which is handy if you have the white ones (as there's no distinguis­hing feathers).

Hold the bird upside down in one hand and look at the vent. Males have a bulb under their tail feather, just above the vent. Very gently push this or squeeze the vent – a male will produce a distinctiv­e white foam.

Quails have been domesticat­ed for centuries worldwide.

Today, they're bred in large numbers for egg and meat production.

The highest producing country is China, where over a billion birds are raised for meat each year, with another 350 million layer birds.

Spain and France produce hundreds of millions of meat birds, and they're also bred in large numbers in Italy and the US.

Japan breeds six million quail each year for eggs.

Quails are the largest gamebird industry in Australia, processing 6.5 million birds annually.

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 ??  ?? Quail hens don't go broody, but will return to the same spot each day to lay their eggs.
Quail hens don't go broody, but will return to the same spot each day to lay their eggs.
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 ??  ?? The wild-feathered female (left) is larger, and has ligher, spotty feathering on her chest. The male has a red chest.
The wild-feathered female (left) is larger, and has ligher, spotty feathering on her chest. The male has a red chest.
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