The other day after reading the article in the link I went to check how to translate sorghum in italian and I was so surprised! We call it "saggina" and it's grown mainly to manufacture brooms with it (I believe the production is exclusively artigianal). Sometimes translating to italian is the only way for me to put things in context, as you can imagine

Anyway, I don't think I ever heard of it as animal food so I did a bit of googling around, and found out two interesting facts.
The first one is that bunnies love munching on those brooms, basically the long ramifications of the sorghum. I was wondering if our birds can play with them too.
Tielfan you said that sorghum is safe at most stages; is the ramification a safe stage? Usually it's cut from the plant when the grain is mature.
Fact two is that while many italian people get confused between "saggina" (sorghum vulgare) and "sagina" (sagina subulata), apparently birds love both. The sagina is Irish Moss, or Heath Pearlwort (this second name I never heard before), do we know anything about it being safe for tiels? Apparently some birds really go mad for it.
tielfan wrote:
A word of warning though, do NOT sprout sorghum/milo and feed the sprouts to your birds. Sorghum is safe at most stages, but the sprout stage is loaded with prussic acid which is toxic.
How old the plant must be to be safe? and when you say "unripe sorghum seed" you mean that we can only give them the seeds growing from the plant?
I am sorry I am a bit confused about what is safe and what is not.