A group of wild budgies is called a flock.
A group of wild budgies is called a flock.
The collective noun is a chatter of budgerigars, a clatter of budgerigars, and a flock of budgerigars. The Oxford English Dictionary list no specific collective term for a group of budgerigars, it does however list the following terms for groups of birds in general: Dissimulation (fanciful), fleet, flight, flock (standard), parcel, pod, volary (in an aviary) Buderigars are small parrots and the OED list the following collective terms for parrots: Company, flock, pandemonium (possibly fanciful), psittacosis
budgeriegars can lay up to 2 to 6 eggs in a group ;)
There are more than 500,0000 budgerigars because new ones are born each year so no matter if you say there won't be any budgerigars there will be lots of them.
No. Budgerigars are very common, both as pets worldwide, and in their native habitat and country of Australia.
cool
Mine seems to!
it sounds like honking!!
Australia
In the wild, a flock. There is nothing quite like the sound and sight of a huge flock of budgerigars frenziedly congregating in gum trees after the rain.
From a person who breeds budgies in their house.
Parakeets, if referring to Budgerigars, originate from Australia.