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It is currently Sun May 11, 2025 2:29 pm
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Chipper
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Post subject: Re: Caring for new chicks and parent birds  Posted: Sun Nov 30, 2014 10:36 am |
Cockatiel |
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Posts: 1645 Joined: Nov 2014 Gave happy chirps:
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Got happy chirps: 49 times
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I would say that parents limited their feedings to a minimum. I can mostly see them cleaning the babies (picking up probably pieces of formula from their faces), rather than feeding them. I still feed them twice a day. The babies never ask me for food, of course Should I feed them until 8 weeks of age, right? I will do the 8th week once a day probably. Does this sound like a good plan? I don't know what to better do about the cage. We bought a bigger cage but were too busy to assemble it. The first egg was laid on Nov 12nd, so its about to hatch. Should I assemble the new cage and let the older chicks spend a night there, or should I try to move a whole thing (including the nestbox) to the new cage? I would hate to mess up with the nestbox so late in the incubation. The chicks basically are out of the cage all day long.
Last edited by Chipper on Sun Nov 30, 2014 10:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
_________________ Cuddles and Trillie (cockatiel parents) and their 8 children
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Chipper
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Post subject: Re: Caring for new chicks and parent birds  Posted: Sun Nov 30, 2014 10:40 am |
Cockatiel |
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Posts: 1645 Joined: Nov 2014 Gave happy chirps:
19 times
Got happy chirps: 49 times
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What is a good age to send babies to their new homes? We are getting attached to them.... One chick, Bella, is landing on my shoulder or head when I am trying to feed her making feeding difficult but its still adorable What are the good ways to sell the babies to good homes? Is craigslist good enough? How much do you guys normally ask? I have seen ads that only say "Hand fed Baby cockatiels - 30 dollars each" that sounds like a mill. If I see dots when a pied tiel is spreading her wing and tail feathers, does it mean this is a girl?
_________________ Cuddles and Trillie (cockatiel parents) and their 8 children
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Chipper
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Post subject: Re: Caring for new chicks and parent birds  Posted: Mon Dec 01, 2014 11:52 am |
Cockatiel |
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Posts: 1645 Joined: Nov 2014 Gave happy chirps:
19 times
Got happy chirps: 49 times
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Hmm, how the fact that the birds are from the breeder make them so cheap? I understand, this is probably the way it is, but I certainly won't think of myself as a breeder, because I am not. After all the hard work, nerves and expenses, 30 dollars each? this is a rhetoric question though. Petco sells them for 140, Petland for 120, our local bird store for 110. I was thinking to ask 80-100. Its not about money of course, but I have internal protest to even consider as cheap as 30 dollars. They are exotic birds and I thought they shouldn't be this cheap, just to make sure that people who buy them won't treat them like "its easier to buy a replacement rather than take bird to the vet".
I paid 140 for Cuddles, the mom, which included the cage and some food.
_________________ Cuddles and Trillie (cockatiel parents) and their 8 children
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Chipper
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Post subject: Re: Caring for new chicks and parent birds  Posted: Mon Dec 01, 2014 1:41 pm |
Cockatiel |
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Posts: 1645 Joined: Nov 2014 Gave happy chirps:
19 times
Got happy chirps: 49 times
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Does it happen that babies are not getting sold for a long time?
_________________ Cuddles and Trillie (cockatiel parents) and their 8 children
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Chipper
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Post subject: Re: Caring for new chicks and parent birds  Posted: Mon Dec 01, 2014 11:19 pm |
Cockatiel |
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Posts: 1645 Joined: Nov 2014 Gave happy chirps:
19 times
Got happy chirps: 49 times
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this makes sense, thanks.
_________________ Cuddles and Trillie (cockatiel parents) and their 8 children
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Chipper
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Post subject: Re: Caring for new chicks and parent birds  Posted: Tue Dec 02, 2014 10:44 am |
Cockatiel |
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Posts: 1645 Joined: Nov 2014 Gave happy chirps:
19 times
Got happy chirps: 49 times
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Is tap water finally OK for them? I use Ozarka in water bowls but there is also a large bowl they like to bath in, I usually use filtered tap water that I heat a little bit. What can I do to help them look pretty again? All of them have traces of dried formula on the chest. Would spraying them with fine mist help to get rid of dried formula? I clean them as good as I can after feeding but can't get them completely clean. Trillie, their father, loves being sprayed. while the mother hates it (she takes bathes) Is it natural for them to sleep in awkward places like on top of the mirror or sitting on pinata toy? We even have competition for this funny awkward locations  Also, is it always a case that fertile egg would get rotten in case of DIS? I don't want to think this direction but there has been a lot of shaking in the cage since the eggs been laid.
_________________ Cuddles and Trillie (cockatiel parents) and their 8 children
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Chipper
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Post subject: Re: Caring for new chicks and parent birds  Posted: Tue Dec 02, 2014 11:37 am |
Cockatiel |
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Posts: 1645 Joined: Nov 2014 Gave happy chirps:
19 times
Got happy chirps: 49 times
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Do I need to take birds to the vet for check up before I attempt to sell them, or not necessary (of there is no visible problems) ?
_________________ Cuddles and Trillie (cockatiel parents) and their 8 children
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Chipper
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Post subject: Re: Caring for new chicks and parent birds  Posted: Wed Dec 03, 2014 8:22 pm |
Cockatiel |
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Posts: 1645 Joined: Nov 2014 Gave happy chirps:
19 times
Got happy chirps: 49 times
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I looked at the weight charts and my chicks seem to be a little underweight. 3 of them are 7 weeks today but none of them weighs 90g. They all are between 80 and 90g. Is it an issue or not? I figured out handfeeding for 2 of them who eat as they should. Another one is eating when I restrain him on the table, but still he voluntarily open his beak. I have a problem with our pearl girl. She is very stubborn, wiggly and doing crazy movements. it seems that she does want to eat but doesn't know how and doesn;t cooperate at all. As soon as I am about to squeeze formula in her beak, she would do frantic movement so that formula goes all around. Then she would do pumping movement which suggests that she wants it but my squeeze is gone. I don't know what to do with her, I am tired. I understand its also lack of my experience that is on the way. It would probably help to feed them more often but its not easy for me to find enough time. The parents sitting together in the nestbox most part of the day, the father is hiding there from the chicks. The chicks are very boringly sitting doing nothing and waiting for him to come out. No fun. The first egg is due but nobody hatched. I am worried. Can shaking in the cage be harmful for eggs? the chicks fight over sleeping spots. the cage is shaken and the nestbox is shaken but nobody messed up with the eggs. I hope that shock is absorbed by the bedding. Mom eats very little. Once or twice a day.
_________________ Cuddles and Trillie (cockatiel parents) and their 8 children
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