These in the title are the mildest adjectives I could find in my head.
I joke about it, but I'm pretty appalled and worried.
Last Thursday I was doing the usual morning routine, opening the cages, and I saw Trilly sitting on the bottom of the cage. I was worried because I thought she was sick, usually she can't wait to get out, instead she was just sitting in the corner.
When I put the hand inside to touch her, she freaked out and started climbing the bars, and I saw a little egg: that's what she was doing, she was sitting on her egg

I was in shock and had to go sit down
She immediately went back to her egg, desperately trying to protect it, rolling it in a corner. I will not write down the insults I threw at her, they will get me banned lol.
I thought of leaving the egg on the bottom of the cage, but then I thought better not because the other birds would try to get in (they all go to each other cages during the day) and fights would ensue.
After long thinking I decided to move trilly and Frank to a bigger cage and put the nest in. They were pretty chuffed of course, going in and out of the nest and admiring their little egg.
After about one hour, they completely ignored the egg and the nest, and that lasted two days. Then they started sitting on it.
Trilly had babies a few months ago, the clutch started hatching at the end of October. Isn't it too early for her to have more now?
She was doing so well, no hormonal behaviour, no eggs... then two weeks ago she and hubby started to look for nests and I immediately stopped soft food and covered them for very long nights. Obviously I failed.
I am worried that these eggs are coming too early, too close in time to her last babies.
Is there anything I can do to at least reduce the number of eggs that she's gonna lay?
I don't think I will let them hatch, even though my partner is saying that it's very unfair of me to boil her eggs. But he is not the one who has to care for them, so easy to say for him!
What is the procedure for boiling the eggs without destroying them? they look so tiny and fragile.
Otherwise I can get dummy eggs but i am not sure about the size. On eBay UK they sell dummy eggs for various birds. Excluding the obviously wrong ones, this is what I can get:
large parakeet - 24mm (that's almost 1")
budgies - size not specified
pigeons and doves - 1.5"
This seller says that his pigeon eggs are suitable for cockatiels
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/TOP-QUALITY-PLASTER-PIGEON-PARROT-DUMMY-EGGS-MULTIPLE-QUATITIES-AVAILABLE-/131009000799?pt=UK_Pet_Supplies_Poultry&var=&hash=item1e80beb55fThere is one last think I'd like to ask. I know that the whole process is very tough on both parents. But I'd like to know which part of the process is actually the most challenging for their body: The egg laying/sitting on eggs or the chick raising?