Yes they can have their own cages but make sure they dont beat up each other when they get out of the cages. But sometmes you might not want to do that, because then the parakeet might get mad and starting killing somebody. Maybe even kill you.
separate them in different cages
I think the answer would be yes. That is just my opinion.
It depends on the nature of the first bird. If you want to test it. Place them in separate cages and have them face each other. If they hiss and screech, thn no
A Quaker is a Christian who is a member of the Religious Society of Friends.
A Quaker is a Quaker is a Quaker. Quakers refer to each other as 'Friend', believing that all people, no matter what title or status they may hold or crime they might have committed is as important and significant as any other person.
boys name will beAlladinKatoLinusMcFlyNeroOliverPercyReubengirls name will beAbbyBluffyCassieElviraGidgetHenriettaMistyNadiabest parakeet names will beAdagioBonbonChippergizzmoHoudiniMalibuPabloZorro
The Carolina Parakeet is an extinct bird. It was once found in the Carolinas and many other eastern states.http://johnjames.audubon.org/last-carolina-parakeet
It depends whether a bird feels threatened by the other bird then they might attack each other but if they don't feel threatened then this is unlikely.
You don't introduce a Parakeet to another Parakeet. They get to know each other on their own, They might make a flock and start grooming if they start fighting and draw blood have a extra cage to separate them.
well..the parakeet would if it approves the other.
Parakeet can refer to many different species of small parrot, some of which are blue. If you are from the U.S., the most common species that is called a parakeet is the budgerigar, which has many color mutations that appear blue. If the bird being sold is less than $40 it is probably a budgerigar. Other possibilities that are common in the pet trade are Quaker/Monk parakeets (Myiopsitta monachus) and Alexandrine parakeets (Psittacula eupatria). In both cases, if the bird looks blue it is a color mutation and not the natural wild color.
not in the wild, but most of the time in they will in captivity they will. no one knows why.