my budgie is female.
its better to get a male because they're more friendly and they are more likely to talk.
To tell them apart older males have dark blue ceres and females have pinkish brown ceres
young males have light purplish ceres and young females have light blue ceres with white rings around the flares(nostrils)
if what you are talking bout is a budgie with an almost white nose than yes.
The adult male Budgie retains its' pink cere, the adult female's is usually brown after starting out blue. OCCASIONALLY, a pastel male Budgie will have a blue cere, but this is rare.
Not what i know of,I have seen female budgies that's blue
they can b any colours
Yes. female budgies have brown or pink.
yes
The males only have blue beaks during the summer. Since summer and spring is their breeding time, I guess it's to attract mates or to let the females know that they are males, but they have many other ways to let the females know they are males.
grit holds down budgies food and is very healthy for budgies deit.
No, penguins only have beaks. No, penguins only have beaks.
They can eat them, mine enjoy them, but only as an occasional treat!
Yes, you can add an apostrophe followed by an s ('s) to show ownership for singular nouns ending in s, such as "James's car." However, for plural nouns ending in s, you only add an apostrophe after the s, like in "the students' books."
This cannot be answered simply, because there is actually no specific breed of bird called a "parakeet". The term "parakeet" is a generalised term to cover numerous species of smaller, long-tailed parrots, specifically budgies, lorikeets or cockatiels. If you are really talking about budgies, which is the bird most commonly referred to in the States as a "parakeet", then a mature male tends to have a deep blue cere, which is the waxy bit above the beak where the bird's nostrils are. Males only develop this blue as they mature towards repreoductive age. Females have a white cere but, when they are in breeding season, it deepens in colour to brown.
No. Periods are seen only in placental mammals. Birds do not have them.
Sure, but only a little. Most live on nectar, which they basically lap up, so they only need to open their beaks enough to get their tongues out.
Not usually, only if the fowl has a problem with an injury or deformation.
If you are buying them from a pet store, you can never be sure. But most breeders will start selling baby budgies after they are weaned. Some are only a few weeks old.
Fruit will only divelop from female parts of the flower but many plants can be both male and female.