T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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48.1 | Fetch that Feather Rope!!! | FREKE::HUTCHINS | Feathered Obsessions Aviary | Thu Nov 10 1988 12:57 | 39 |
| Hi Doug!
You are going over the edge!!! Five weeks sounds a little
young...if they are hand raised, they should want to come out to
you as soon as they see you!
Genetics...the male will most likely carry the genes for different
colors...But for an experiment, I am going to set up Bianca with
a blue pied male....at the very least I should get some very light
colored pied babies -- with lots of white!
The Cere - waxy band across the nostrils....a male is blue and a
female is tan....a baby that has no colors yet will have tiny white
circles inside the nostrils if it's a hen...The exception to this
rule is a hen that is out of breeding condition or male/female that
is suffering from vitamin deficiencies...breeding or deficient birds
will have blueish/tan ceres; and it is not uncommon for a hen to
have a blue cere when out of condition or just finished rearing
a clutch.
Make sure when you buy a new bird that they don't look puffy, sleep
on both feet, have brown stains above the cere or dull looking
feathers!
I believe I have seen mention of Pet Land here in notes...I dont
recall any negative replies!
Another thing about buying pet shop birds...most often they have
yellow water in the cages...I always thought it was vitamins, cause
my birds drink yellow water...Well, most pet shops are using
tetracycline in the water as a matter of course. Well, that's fine
if the birds are ill...but the tetracycline will kill all the bacteria
in the birds system and weaken resistance of healthy bacteria which
strengthens bad bacteria, and when you really *need* the tetracycline,
the birds will be immune to it!
Did this help answer some of your questions??
J 8^}
|
48.2 | | LEDDEV::CALABRIA | Ski the Dow ! | Thu Nov 10 1988 14:32 | 9 |
| RE -.1
What does a brown stain over the cere indicate ? I have noticed
this a couple of times on my lutino cockatiel. She is a little
over a year old.
thanks,
john
|
48.3 | Bird in drag? | WITNES::MACONE | It's the story of a man named Brady | Thu Nov 10 1988 14:51 | 14 |
| re .1
Are the cere colors the same on cockatiels?
I bought a male and a female 2 years ago, and they have never laid
an egg even though they have have the most incredibly active sex
life that I have ever seen. Soooooo, I am starting to wonder if
maybe by chance i just so happened to buy a pair of homosexual birds.
Is there a way I can tell sex besides listening to what the pet
store told me?
-Nancy
|
48.4 | my personal observations | EUREKA::WHITE | | Thu Nov 10 1988 16:11 | 22 |
| This is my first enter into this notesfile. Hope I do it right!
My experience with cockatiels, (I own 70+ parrots, budgies, cockatiels)
is that females show faint yellow stripes along the inside of the
wing, at least all mine do. I have greys, pearlies, and a few cinnimon
with ALL interbreeding as opposed to ME dictating who goes with
who. The other most common method (which incidently is NOT foolproof)
is the coloration of the head, where females are usually duller?
in the area of the yellow head and red patches. Sexing usually is
difficult at best before the birds are 6 months old.
As far as "homosexual" tendancies, I really cannot say other
than I have never seen a female who expressed the desires your birds
seem to show without laying at lease one egg........but a philosophical
point would be that seeing that males usually prefer the "top" they'd
be changing positions constantly???? Just a thought.
hope this helps.
Chet White futur aviculturist and general bird lover.
|
48.5 | Get them in a closet! | FREKE::HUTCHINS | Feathered Obsessions Aviary | Thu Nov 10 1988 16:58 | 30 |
|
HI KIDS! 8^}
John, the brown stain is indicitave of nasal discharges. Birds
should not have a discharge. If they do, they most likely are
harboring an upper respiratory infection that needs to be treated.
Birds seem to defy gravity all the time. Besides flying and having
hollow bones, no blood platelettes and very little bone marrow,
they also sneeze upwards. Like, they get a runny nose, up - into
the forehead!
Cockatiel ceres are all the same. A good way to tell is like in
.4. You check under the wings...hens have little yellow bars all
the way to the tips of the feathers. Immature males will have these
bars, but only on the secondary feathers. Those are the ones close
to the elbow. Sometimes hens have stripes inside the tail feathers
too. Trying to sex by facial colors is difficult...I have some
cockatiel hens that have taken best in show over some real robust
yellow cocks! There is always surgical sexing, but that's stressful.
Males talk, hens don't.
Nancy....theres gotta be one in every crowd! I have a gracious
pair, Chet an Paul! They are passionate lovers....no eggs, no babies,
guys just can't do that with guys!!! What a topic!! 8^} ^0^ v0v
(I'm bad!) Females will do this too, but they will lay eggs! Just
won't be fertile eggs is all! Becareful not to encourage this activity
between females though. The stress and excitement could lead to
egg binding!
J
|
48.6 | hand raised vs hand fed | SVCRUS::KROLL | | Fri Nov 11 1988 19:55 | 13 |
| there is a difference between hand raised and hand fed.
hand raised: taken out of nest box frequently and petted by breeder.
parents feed. Budgies can be be tamer this way. Burkes help them
not to panic so much as they leave the box.
Hand Fed: pulled 2 weeks or sooner for some and fed by human means.
these birds usally have no fear of people but if mistreated will
revert.
I would take eather of these methods than a bird that is wild.
nothing is more discourging than to see a bird trash every time
you get near it.
|
48.7 | | LEDDEV::CALABRIA | Ski the Dow ! | Wed Nov 16 1988 14:33 | 9 |
|
while birdsitting my mothers male budgie I realized that my male
and her's got along "very well" these two were inseperable! since
he was severely and viciously henpecked by his mate, I decided to
let Ma take him on a trial basis, which turned out to be permanent.
I have to say I miss the little guy, he was probably the tamest
bird I'll ever have.
|
48.8 | Budgies, male/female | POLAR::FERGUSON | | Tue Apr 11 1989 16:22 | 7 |
| I just bought two budgies , the pet shop informed that they are
2 females. How can you tell male from female, you pet shops they'll
tell you anything to make a sale. Please help me out on this ,
my two budgies are White with very little blue , one has a little
black on the tail and the other has all white tail.
Thank You for your time and hope you can help me out.
Betty
|
48.9 | | FSTVAX::WIMMER | | Wed Apr 12 1989 13:34 | 6 |
| You sex budgies based on the color of the cere....the skin above
the beak where the nostrils are. Males ceres are blue, females
are pinkish or "beigish". They may don't be defined if they are
very young. The only exception I know of is a harlequin, where
the males light rather than blue ceres.
|
48.10 | how old? | MR1MI1::DHOWE | | Mon Nov 06 1995 13:18 | 9 |
| I have a question about budgie babies. One of my pairs has raised
their first clutch and have gotten an albino baby and a robin's
egg blue baby. My question is this: I have other mature budgies
(four of them) that I would like to re-introduce into the flight
cage. How old do the babies need to be before I can do this? It's
a huge flight cage, so space is not an issue. Thank you!
deb (P.S. can't get the "Marie" out of the header..., so please
ignore)
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48.11 | | MROA::PULSIFER | UNHAMPERED BY FACTS AND INFORMATION | Wed Nov 08 1995 08:54 | 11 |
| Hi Deb,
What "Marie" in what header ?
As far as introducing the adults (until you hear from an expert), I
would suggest you could do it as soon as they are weaned and not being
cared for by the parents. I would probably be good if you could do it
on a weekend when you were going to be around to monitor the behavior
and intervene if necessary.
Doug
|
48.12 | | MR1MI1::DHOWE | | Wed Nov 08 1995 09:35 | 15 |
| Hi Doug,
It was just this morning that they actually have flown up
to the "big bird" perches (where mommy and daddy bird sit). Dad
is still feeding them. I will wait until I am sure they are
eating on their own well, and make the move when I'm home to
supervise. I was worried about the new comers beating up/killing
the babies.
("Marie" used to show up in the header, but I remember now that I
finally figured out how to delete it...)
Thanks Doug!!!
deb
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