Free books! Quail Q&A, and other tidbits from Floridahillbilly

Today’s article was brought to you by the generous folks over at Hides.com. Go check out their great line of “Multifunction Eyewear Necessities”, and tell them FloridaHillbilly sent you!

Today I am updating everyone on a few changes here at FloridaHillbilly.com, as well as answering some quail questions that came in last week.

First, I’m sure you’ve noticed that I now include ads in my articles, as well as small ad banners on my sidebar. This is to allow me to continue writing on a daily basis. My wife is very understanding about my drive to write here, but she becomes even MORE understanding when I can generate some income while doing so.

So from here out, you’ll get to see links to products and services that have sponsored my efforts. Each has been tasted, tested, tried, and approved by myself. And if for some reason, you ever have a problem with any of my advertisers and are unhappy for some reason, let me know, I’ll do what I can to resolve the issues. Plus I want to know if there is an issue.

Hides.com has been a supporter of mine for almost as long as I’ve been writing. They offer a line of eye wear accessories that I’ve found to be very handy. The have a variety of colors shapes, sizes, and functions. I cannot do justice in a few lines to their products or their customer service. Go check them out, even if you don’t buy anything, you WILL be impressed with the products they offer. Promise.

Reef-Hunter have also been a long-time supporter, and they also double as a local resource for lots of Florida pastimes. They are the folks that got me hooked on spearfishing, had me researching lionfish after showing me how tasty there are, and hopefully one day, will be there to BBQ some manatee if I ever get the chance. They offer a line of tropical-themed apparel much like you see everywhere these days. Custom artwork, great products, and a theme that is dear to my heart. Go check them out!

And thanks them both for their support of FloridaHillbilly.com, I know I sure appreciate it! They’ve both helped me along in a multitude of ways, and have helped keep me going in more than a few small ways.

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Second, I cannot stress how handy it is for you all to goto my Facebook page and “Like” me there. I post almost daily with free Kindle books in the homesteading, gardening, survival, farming, and how-to categories. These are all free at the time I post them, but are only free for a limited time. Once you’ve “bought” the free book, it is yours forever, again, at no cost to you.

Don’t have a Kindle? No problem. Amazon offers a reader application for just about every platform there is. And you can always simply have it sent to your “Cloud Reader”, free online storage for every Kindle book and application you’ve ever purchased through Amazon, even if the price was “$0.00”. I have hundreds of books simply sitting in my “Cloud Reader” for future reading.

The catch? Anything you buy from Amazon within 24 hours of your “free purchase” nets me a small percentage, one that is already included in your price. SOMEONE is getting it, why not let it be your favorite blogging hillbilly? Again, no extra cost for you, and it might just help me stay in the writing business.

And for the record, I get the same percentage of each of your free purchases…my percentage on your $0.00 purchase is exactly $0.00.

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Rabbits and lending a hand.

Over the weekend, I went out to a local reader’s house, to show him my method for harvesting rabbits. TK was a gracious host, and was very happy to see there were some ways to improve his processing. I brought along my young friend, Zach, and we all got to take a tour of TK’s place. I am completely jealous of his little homestead. When I saw his 5 acres, and compared it to my measly 1/4 acre, all I could think of was all the space for gardens and fruit trees.

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My wife and I are also planning on getting together with some folks to show them how to get started in canning. I’m getting pressure from some locals to start offering classes for canning and other food preservation methods, along with gardening, small animal raising, and other things you read about here. We’ll see how it goes…what do you think? Would you be interested in a local class on canning?

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On to another one of my favorite subjects – quail!

I received a comment on the last of the 5 part series on raising quail that made me realize I failed to mention a couple things. There we also some other tidbits I wanted to add in. I do so love talking about quail!

Here is the comment/questions:

DB,
  Still some things I’m a little unsure of:  Do you/can you keep your brooder and incubator outside?  Can you keep the adults in the shade or do they need more direct light?  How hot does it get in your area?  If I keep them in my backyard it gets up to 117,  over 100 for 60 days a year.  I might end up with baked eggs?! Did you infer that if you don’t keep males that the females will still produce eggs?  Because if my wife thinks she is eating fertilized eggs she would flip out.  How do you sex them after the brooder?  Is that when you harvest the extra males or do you separate the males and have like a bachelor cage until they are adult size?  Can you keep them outside still in the winter?  I would assume you cant use the light to keep the adults warm in the winter because they wouldn’t sleep with the light.

I think I have enough questions for almost another blog post, maybe this will get you out of thinking of a topic one day!

-Drew  aka Phorz in the rabbit hole horde!

My personal response to him was this:

GREAT questions…and while I’ve written all of the answers in various places, here is a rundown for you…and yes, I’ll be using this as a post later, tyvm!

 
Do you/can you keep your brooder and incubator outside?  I do, on a screened porch with lots of ventilation. This is important for smell control, and to help regulate temps.
 
Can you keep the adults in the shade or do they need more direct light?  I keep them in the shade.  I live in south Florida, summer temps are in mid 90’s, with STUPID amounts of humidity. I also try to keep a fan on them during the day (an old truck radiator cooling fan powered by my solar-charged battery bank) They also dislike being rained on, so I keep them covered too. One cage is under a leafy tree with a sheet of coroplast on top as a roof.
 
(Side note on coroplast. I used and old sign from along the road, you know the ones I’m talking about, advertising everything form “I buy houses” to “$100 for 100 signs”. Our county considers them trash, so I picked up a few, then spray painted them. Takes the weather here VERY well. This is also the same material I used to build my quail brooder – full circle!)
 
How hot does it get in your area?  Summers mid 90’s , winters mid 70’s down to low 30’s on rare winter nights. I’ve seen snow flurries a few times, and some minor scattered frost a couple more. Frost does massive amounts of plant damage here, we are NOT used to it!
 
If I keep them in my backyard it gets up to 117,  over 100 for 60 days a year,  I might end up with baked eggs?! Gather eggs daily, they should be fine. Most countries don’t even store eggs in the fridge, they stay fresh for several months just sitting at room temps, as long as they stay out of direct sunlight. I’d highly suggest a fan of some sort, and lots of shade for your location. Also unlimited amounts of water in an automatic feeding system. A few hours without water in our high temps, and you’ll lose a lot of birds. PLEASE learn that lesson from advice, not experience!
 
Did you infer that if you don’t keep males that the females will still produce eggs?  This is true with all birds, just like humans, egg production continues, even without a male fertilizing them.
 
Because if my wife thinks she is eating fertilized eggs she would flip out. I can promise you that is she is eating free-range eggs, they are probably fertilized. As far as I know there is no way to visually know if an egg has been fertilized, as long as the incubation process hasn’t started (store at 75-80 degrees or cooler temps). Once incubation starts, the embryo starts to develop, and it becomes pretty obvious. And has she ever heard of balut?
 
male-vs-female-quail-coloringHow do you sex them after the brooder?  For the “normal” color patterns, the males have rust colored breast plumage. Looking at the picture to the right, the brown speckled bird is female, while the bird with the rust colored breast feathers is a male. This doesn’t work for most other color variations.
 
Another method is to listen to see what ones “crow”. While I call the call a “crow”, it is more of a trill.
 

[ca_audio url=”http://floridahillbilly.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/Male-Cotournix-Call.mp3″ width=”500″ height=”27″ css_class=”codeart-google-mp3-player” autoplay=”false”]

 
Is that when you harvest the extra males or do you separate the males and have like a bachelor cage until they are adult size?  I run them all together. This saves space, allows them all to interact together and live as normal a life as I can provide reasonably, and once they get old enough to harvest I pick the smallest males for harvesting, leaving the larger ones for breeding. My hatching eggs come from the older, more mature birds, so I’ve already culled the smaller, undesirable males.  I also cull any with temperament issues…..I once had a `roo that was NASTY to every other bird…the good news was it didn’t seem to affect his flavor 🙂
 
Can you keep them outside still in the winter? I do, and have zero issues. Winter is actually easier on them than summer, though shorter days does adversely affect egg production…so I keep a light on (see below)
 
 I would assume you can’t use the light to keep the adults warm in the winter because they wouldn’t sleep with the light. On the contrary, I leave an LED car ail light (also powered by my solar powered battery bank) on 24/7 on top of the cages. They require 14 or so hours of light each day to get them to continue to lay eggs. Once they are feathered out, I don’t have any issues with cold, as long as I give them shelter from the wind.
 
 
Hope that helps!
db
 
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So that’s it for today…if you have questions, email me. db
 
 
I love to help out, you should know that by know.
 
Peace,
db

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Somebody gets the referral fee, why not allow this old Hillbilly use it to help make ends meet?

One comment:

  1. I’d like to say thanks to DB & Zach for coming out this weekend. I can say that with DB’s help my rabbit processing time is down by nearly 50% possibly more.

    My next goal with meat is to get a functional plucker so I can keep the skin on my ducks, geese and chickens. We had a plucked duck on Saturday and it was just not the same as the plucked duck we had a few months ago.

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