Wildlife Biologist
Well-Known Member
I am just wondering what experiences members have had with survival rates of released pen raised quail? I have been interested in this for years. I have banded every quail I have released on certain properties. I use different color leg bands and rotate the bands each year to a different leg. I have visually observed and have used trail cameras to monitor them. I have especially been interested in the ones that have survived to nest. The main and almost exclusive issue is predation. They don't have the learned predator avoidance that wild birds do. The dumber ones go fast and they are all dumb. To lessen the impact of this issue I learned early to release them near wild coveys in hopes that they would join the covey and thus stand a better chance of survival. I had experienced that pen raised birds tended to walk around and frequent open areas. Hawks and other predators learned to frequent these areas and feasted on them. Extensive predator control helped with this issue. After I learned to release them near wild coveys I began to see more surviving. I monitored the killed birds on subsequent hunts and saw that they indeed joined the wild coveys. It seems the wild birds stay mostly in thicker cover and learned predator avoidance and thus have a better survival rate. At least that was my theory. With the wild birds joining these wild coveys more and more have survived to nest. What are your experiences?
Also I would like to know how you go about releasing birds? I learned a technique from a old-timer quail plantation owner that I was advising. He would place 6-10 birds (covey size) from the flight pen into each burlap bag. The burlap bags containing the birds would then be quickly transported to the release point. He would then take a burlap bag containing the quail and spin it very fast around and around his head rapidly for about 30 seconds then drop the bag to the ground and open it dumping the birds out. They were so dizzy that they would not fly off. Over a period of several minutes they would be okay and start walking around as a covey but stay together. The clients would then be brought in for the hunt within a couple hours.
I learned from this same man a proven method to better flight train the pen raised birds. Early each morning we would flush about half or more of the birds from the flight pens into the area adjacent to the pens. The young pups and dogs in their early training would then individually be brought in on a long check cord to hunt and learn. We would then train the dogs on the released birds. As they would point we would flush the birds and fire a blank pistol into the air while throwing a dead bird out for the puppy to retrieve. When finished training, he would turn a Brittany Spaniel that he would muzzle and place on a long check cord into the birds. The dog would chase and flush but could not catch them. We would also walk around and flush the birds. The flight pens were built like a recall trap. Most but not all of the birds would recall back into the flight pen during the day. It is important to conduct these activities early in the morning in order to give the birds time to recall. Electric fences were placed around the flight pen area to help with predators. Extensive predator control was conducted around the flight pens and especially around the electric fence. The predators would roam the electric fence in an effort to gain entrance and would be caught. Each morning prior to training, the traps would be sprung and then reset afterwards. Predators of all kinds came for a free meal. This technique worked well. I was advising different quail hunting plantations and could readily notice the difference in the flight of quail released. I was convinced of the effectiveness and adopted the method.
I soaked up all the knowledge I could from him and other old-timers. These were eye opening experiences that I cherished.
Also I would like to know how you go about releasing birds? I learned a technique from a old-timer quail plantation owner that I was advising. He would place 6-10 birds (covey size) from the flight pen into each burlap bag. The burlap bags containing the birds would then be quickly transported to the release point. He would then take a burlap bag containing the quail and spin it very fast around and around his head rapidly for about 30 seconds then drop the bag to the ground and open it dumping the birds out. They were so dizzy that they would not fly off. Over a period of several minutes they would be okay and start walking around as a covey but stay together. The clients would then be brought in for the hunt within a couple hours.
I learned from this same man a proven method to better flight train the pen raised birds. Early each morning we would flush about half or more of the birds from the flight pens into the area adjacent to the pens. The young pups and dogs in their early training would then individually be brought in on a long check cord to hunt and learn. We would then train the dogs on the released birds. As they would point we would flush the birds and fire a blank pistol into the air while throwing a dead bird out for the puppy to retrieve. When finished training, he would turn a Brittany Spaniel that he would muzzle and place on a long check cord into the birds. The dog would chase and flush but could not catch them. We would also walk around and flush the birds. The flight pens were built like a recall trap. Most but not all of the birds would recall back into the flight pen during the day. It is important to conduct these activities early in the morning in order to give the birds time to recall. Electric fences were placed around the flight pen area to help with predators. Extensive predator control was conducted around the flight pens and especially around the electric fence. The predators would roam the electric fence in an effort to gain entrance and would be caught. Each morning prior to training, the traps would be sprung and then reset afterwards. Predators of all kinds came for a free meal. This technique worked well. I was advising different quail hunting plantations and could readily notice the difference in the flight of quail released. I was convinced of the effectiveness and adopted the method.
I soaked up all the knowledge I could from him and other old-timers. These were eye opening experiences that I cherished.


