No, birds do not eat bean they have a diet of eating seeds and corn definitely not beans, although some birds eat mixed beans.
Matter fact, its GREAT for you. As long as your flesh is warming in a stable and controlled heating environment, its safe! Keep things such as covers, clothes, rags, etc away from the heater though. Enjoy!
Do NOT do it yourself no matter what people with no expierience tell you. It can be harmful if you dont do it right, or even permanent, whick can end terribly. Take the bird to a vetrinarian or other trained proffesional. they have the correct tools and know where to cut
Loads. But most are inexpensive. For starters, a cage. If there's only one parakeet, then a fairly small one. Some perches toward the top for (s)he to play on, maybe a swing, toys, etc. dry seeds you can buy at a pet store, and get a water bottle, leave it out for a night, and use THAT water to feed your keet. Make sure you put the seeds and water in open bowls that you buy, not closed. Rather than eat out of not open bowls, like dispensers or something, keets have been know to starve themselves. There are other, some optional, nutritious things you may add, that you should ask someone at a petstore at.
You might think they are asleep all the time but they are not. They are nocturnal which means they sleep in the day and are awake at night. Rarely you should see them awake in the day time.
On the side, behind the cheek patch. It looks like a slit or small hole under the feathers.
You will know when your parakeets (male and female only) want to mate when they start to get along with each other. The male will start to respect the female and began feeding her. This is also a sign for breeding. Enjoy breeding your parakeets! Trust me, it's a LOT of fun!
Breeding age is when someone or something gets pregent
Sustainable farming is the concept of 'sustainability' in farming now encompasses a much wider range of issues than its earlier, more limited and narrow technical definition. In brief, three basic elements can be seen as critical to the 'sustainability 'agenda' in its current sense:
· Environment protection
· Social responsibility
· Economic viability
Nearly any organic fruits. Just make sure that fruit should only take about 25% of a finches diet. Because they need the nutrients that comes from birdseed. Also it may be a good idea to give your finch brightly colored foods to catch its eye!
They are not really night blind but they are diurnal animals.
Nope. Mine don't i guess they are not like their relatives ''chickens''.
put flour on the bleeding spot!!:)
Flour might work, but many bird books recommend keeping a coagulating agent on hand. Birds can get a "blood feather" which is a malformed feather that doesn't mature. The blood vessel stays open. Blood feathers have to be pulled, then you use a clotting agent if necessary. Google "blood feather" for more complete information.
There are three accepted methods - chemical (barbituate overdose), chemical (carbon dioxide), and projectile (firearm). The only one you could possibly perform properly at home would be the firearm method, and this only if you have a good knowledge of firearms, have the proper caliber of firearm and grain of bullet, know exactly where to place the shot (between the eyes isn't it, and neither is through the hear), and can make the shot correctly on the first attempt.
Because euthanasia via firearm is technically difficult to accomplish properly without extensive training and preparation, most owners elect to have a veterinarian use the chemical (barbituate overdose) option. This is the "pink sauce" or injectable euthanasia solution that is given in a single bolus directly into the vein; the barbituate anesthetizes the animal then stops the heart, resulting in a painless slide into death. Because the barbituate is a controlled drug under US law, only a veterinarian can acquire the drug and authorize its administration; generally the veterinarian is the one to actually inject the drug.
In shelter situations, carbon dioxide can be used, although this is falling out of favor and use due to pressure from animal rights and humane organizations. In this situation, lab-grade concentrations of carbon dioxide are introduced into an air-tight chamber holding the dog; the high concentrations anesthetize then euthanize the dog. However, the transition isn't as smooth as what you typically see with a barbituate injection.
The most common pet bird with the shortest lifespan is the finch and canary.
Finches and canaries live on average for three to six years. There have been rare cases of them living up to 10 years with amazing (expensive) care.
Sadly, if it cannot walk or fly, the vet might recommend euthanasia. However, if the bird is not in obvious pain, you might be able to have it treated.
> The related link below will offer advice on how to take care of an injured bird - good luck .
Like all birds, vultures have a respiratory system composed of lungs (functionally similar to what humans have, although the structure is very different) and a system of air sacs that allows additional oxygen absorption. Vultures inhale to draw in fresh oxygen-rich air and exhale to get rid of carbon dioxide-rich air.
Take him or her to a vet immediately. Do not use antibiotics for sale at pet stores; you have no way of knowing if the problem is caused by a respiratory or digestive infection, liver disease, or one of any number of avian diseases, each requiring different treatment. Take your bird to a vet! Until you get them their, keep them warm, possibly putting a light on the cage or a heating pad underneath half the cage. By keeping them warm their bodies can use calories to fight off disease rather than regulating body heat. Offer them millet, its easy to digest and be sure to put a shallow dish of water on the bottom of the cage in case they are not up to perching.
Best of Luck!
The parents will feed them. The parents eat the seeds and chew them. They spit it out and give it to the babies. Do not worry about them, just give a little bit more seeds so that the parents have enough food.
-erin_animal_lover
I have a Makawao and he has,no pooped in 3 days.what cn I do?
The best option is to allow the mother to take care of the baby.If the mother will not take care of the baby parakeet then you will have to feed it using a dropper which you can get from petsmart and also get special food to feed the baby also from petsmart .Also be sure to keep it safe from dangerous stuff and only keep it in the nesting box.