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This is a badge bit (BB) that is part of the PEP curriculum.  Completing this BB is part of getting the sand badge in Animal Care.

For this BB, you will slaughter and clean a quail.

There is a heap of good information about how to maximize nutrition, minimize cruelty, and increase efficiency in the process. Here is some useful information:
- Practical Slaughter of Poultry
- Keeping Backyard Quail
- Raising Quail



For this BB, the minimum requirements are:
-Start with 1 Live Quail
-Killed in a humane manner
-Processed and either prepared or properly stored within an hour

To document your completion, provide proof of the following as pics or video (less than two minutes):
-Living Quail
-Quail after slaughter, depicting the method used
-Quail dressed (cleaned and processed) ready to be cooked or stored, stating cooking or storage method.
-Organs separated into suitable for human consumption / not suitable for humans consumption, next to quail feathers
COMMENTS:
 
Posts: 37
Location: Northern Michigan (zone 5a)
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cat forest garden foraging
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Submission flagged incomplete
Ok. Nobody in my family hunts, or raises livestock. This is my first time killing and cleaning anything other than fish and invertebrates. Forgive me for not sorting the organs, but with quail they're so small anyways and I think I cut through an intestine so. Ick. The second two were easier, but by then my hands were pretty gross so I didn't take pictures. I've always hated the feeling of raw poultry, and now I know that it's way worse when it's warm! Fun.

I think these were all roosters. I'm actually not 100% sure about the white one, but that was the one I posted about a few weeks ago with the injury. The other two had behavioral issues. The sandy one was way too aggressive. The silver one, that I did first and photographed, was the hardest choice, because he was pretty and not picking fights, but he was way too skittish, flying into walls every time I came near and hurting himself. Plus a few of the hens that hung around him were picking up on that and following suit...
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Staff note (gir bot) :

Mike Barkley flagged this submission as not complete.
BBV price: 1
Note: Certainly wise not to eat potentially tainted organs but the BB requires they be seperated. Please try again.

 
Posts: 80
Location: Zone 5a, Southern Wisconsin
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So I had two quail who were all around trouble, I mean starting fights and startling the rest of them. I've decided to cook these two, and the next two I have and get some more hatching eggs later and hopefully get a better hatch rate this time.

I somewhat misinterpreted "Quail after slaughter, depicting the method used" and did not take a picture immediately after slaughter, but after everything was plucked and cleaned...I hope that isn't an issue...I followed the video in its entirety, took a pair of Cutco scissors to their necks and did it in one clean cut.

The rest of the cleaning went exactly as the provided video.

This was my first time slaughtering and cleaning, and other than missing that second picture, everything went pretty smoothly, didn't even cut an intestine.
.
DSC_0439.JPG
Living quail
Living quail
DSC_0440.JPG
Everything separated, the top left pile is their hearts, lungs and livers, while the right pile is the intestines, a spine(the other is by the feathers) and anything else I didn't want to cook.
Everything separated, the top left pile is their hearts, lungs and livers, while the right pile is the intestines, a spine(the other is by the feathers) and anything else I didn't want to cook.
Staff note (gir bot) :

Someone flagged this submission as not complete.
BBV price: 1
Note: Please try again with your next birds. Be sure to include that required pic!

 
Sienna Scott
Posts: 80
Location: Zone 5a, Southern Wisconsin
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Approved submission
Okay well, attempt two. After the quail fried rice was hit with the hubby and I messed up my last BB, I tried again. Today's meal was roasted quail and potatoes, absolutely delish.
I culled them the exact same way as last time: scissors to the neck and one cut.
DSC_0442.JPG
Living quail.
Living quail.
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After the decapitation...
After the decapitation...
DSC_0445.JPG
Both quail post culling.
Both quail post culling.
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Everything separated. Bottom left: hearts, lungs, livers. Top center: Spines, intestines, and anything I didn't want to cook. bottom right: The cleaned birds
Everything separated. Bottom left: hearts, lungs, livers. Top center: Spines, intestines, and anything I didn't want to cook. bottom right: The cleaned birds
DSC_0448.JPG
Close up of the above.
Close up of the above.
Staff note (gir bot) :

Someone approved this submission.

 
Posts: 23
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Approved submission
I've been keeping quail for a while, but this was my first time processing some of the extra males. They went straight into the freezer afterwards, and became a lovely stew later in the week.
living-quail.jpg
Living Quail
Living Quail
IMG_20220915_115211.jpg
Decapitated Quail using Scissors
Decapitated Quail using Scissors
IMG_20220915_120218.jpg
Heart and Liver at top, gizzards bottom next to Feathers
Heart and Liver at top, gizzards bottom next to Feathers
Staff note (gir bot) :

Paul Fookes approved this submission.
Note: I certify this BB complete. Well done Johanan.

 
Cal Jorgensen
Posts: 37
Location: Northern Michigan (zone 5a)
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Edge case submission
Ten of the fifteen chicks I hatched this summer were males. I kept two, culled the most aggressive three last weekend, and gave away three this morning as part of a barter which netted me a couple more hens, but that still left me with two extra. And I remembered I had this bb unfinished still, so here's a second attempt. They're joining the three from last weekend in the freezer for now, until I'm ready to roast them.
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live quail
live quail
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scissors
scissors
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head removed
head removed
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cleaned bird, digestive tract, spine and feet, heart and liver and lungs, and feathers
cleaned bird, digestive tract, spine and feet, heart and liver and lungs, and feathers
Staff note (gir bot) :

Someone flagged this submission as an edge case.
BBV price: 0
Note: You're missing a bit of text   - stating cooking or storage method.

 
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