Well, first of all, make the cage a pleasant place to be for the rabbit. If the cage is a bad experience for her, then she won't want to be in it.
When you fell it's time for your rabbit to be put back in the cage, try using a special treat to lure her into the cage. If you have to pick her up, then bring her toward you and pet her, talk to her softly, do anything you can to make her feel relaxed and safe (I suggest rubbing the sides of the jaw, it always works for my rabbits). Then gently and slowly pick her up and place her in the cage. Then give her a treat to associate the cage with positive things.
Getting my old rabbit in his cage was always a cinch. We fed him at the same time every day, and the food in his dish would make a rattling sound. So when he had to go back into his cage, we would just put it on the ground, open the side door, and either tap the bowl with a fingernail or put a few oats in it. He would hear it and be in in a flash! See if you can develop an association like that with your rabbit.
Try to close off as many escape routes as possible. Close doors and windows. If your bird's cage has multiple doors, open all of them. Put your bird's favorite treat (a millet spray is very temping and big enough to be eye-catching) just inside the door to lure them inside. Most birds will get tired, bored, or hungry and go back to their cages after an hour or so. Don't try to chase it or catch it, you'll just make it more scared of you and the bird might hurt itself trying to get away. A tame bird is much easier to get back inside its cage. With patience, you can even train a bird to go back to its cage on command (some people use "bedtime" or "go home").
This is what you do:
u have ur way with it until it passes out then put it in the cage :)
Soak some newspaper in parrafin and old oil then put it in a hole wait for 10 minutes.
side ways
The best cage is a small budgie cage.
A budgie and a parakeet are the same thing.
No, the Grey will kill the budgie.
your local cage and Avery magazine for a start, try joining a local budgie society if your budgie is that big you might win one, try dropping a hint.
you discomfrt a budgie by taking it out of its cage you should let it come out it self
No, that's a great sized cage, but with birds, it's always the bigger the better. If you can afford/have space for a bigger cage, go ahead and get it. But that cage is a suberb size for a budgie.
Your Budgie should still remain hand tame , with another bird in the cage , if you keep up the handling.
If you want the new bird to bond with it, yes. If not, no.
A cage for a budgie needs to be fairly large. They need to feel safe but it also needs to be big enough for them to be able to move around and climb.
Check the bottom of his cage for stools.
get him out of the cage and hold him for like half and hour and put him back do that every day and he will feel him self again and he will get to no you better i had that with my budgie and he felt better again after i did the for a week give it a go!
Budgies are simple to take care of but read these hints and instructions very carefully: 1. Give your budgie a safe and large enough cage. 2. Give your budgie plenty of fun toys. Replace the toys regularly so your budgie doesn't get bored. Leave your budgie's favorite toy inside. 3. Give your budgie check-ups at the vet at least once a month. 4. Feel your budgie's breastbone (or wishbone) everyday to make sure your budgie isn't fat. You cannot feel the breastbone if your budgie is fat. 5. Give your budgie high-quality food. 6. Replace your budgie's water EVERYDAY! 7. Clean your budgie's cage every week. 8. Have your budgie stay outside the cage WITH YOUR SUPERVISION! 9. Feel your budgie's food (or look) for seeds that have not been eaten or it will starve. 10. Enjoy the budgie!