Quail are a popular game bird but also important to bird watchers. Unfortunately, their population has declined drastically in the last few decades. There is something the average homeowner can do to help though. Providing habitat and food for the little birds ensures them a safe place to make their homes and help build up their numbers. Landscaping with plants that attract quail will give them cover and a food source.
Planting Gardens for Quail
The most important plants that attract quail in the garden are those that provide cover. They have several predators and rarely fly. They are often at the mercy of cats, larger birds, coyotes, and other animals. Consider life from their eyes. You’re small, have short legs, and can’t see over the top of most bushes. The best plants are those that form a canopy while allowing a path to run amongst them. Ideal plants should be at least 8 inches (20 cm.) tall. Consider using grasses and grass-like plants:
Gamagrass
Rescue grass
Little bluestem
Panic grass
Lovegrass
Wild millet
Smartweed
Partridge pea
Pokeweed
When planting gardens for quail, consider that many grass varieties will die back, and the birds will be left with no nesting sites or cover. That is where adding woody and leafy plants come in handy. Plants like blackberry, dogwood, and wild plum provide important cover areas for the birds. Install such plants at the edge of the landscape where it is quiet and undisturbed. A wide variety of plants will prove to be the best at attracting quail to the garden. Additional plants to consider include:
Loblolly pine
Black locust
Greenbrier
Rose
Sumac
Mesquite
Ash
Spurge
Eastern milkpea
White avens
Sweetclover
Yellow puccoon
Prairie mimosa
Prickly poppy
Beeweed
Amaranth
When quail babies hatch, they quickly are out of the nest searching for food. They will eat the same items as the parents, seeds and small insects, but will need even thicker cover with unobstructed areas of open ground to find seed and have a dust bath. Crops afford all the requirements to raise babies in a safe space. Many, like soybeans, develop a natural canopy with spaces of soil between. A field of wildflowers mixed with native grasses would also make good brooding ground.