If you find a baby bird that appears to need feeding, the best thing to do is not to feed it, but to get it to an appropriate bird rescue organization. In many cases, the begging birds are not abandoned and the parent birds are nearby and tending to their babies as needed, even if they aren't seen.
bird feed
Take it to a vet or some professional organisation.
If you are in the United States, it is illegal to be in posession of native bird species unless you are a licensed wildlife rehabilitator or zoological park. You shouldn't be trying to feed a wild baby bird yourself. Contact your state's department of natural resources.
well if that baby bird is your pet and it can nearly fly,....... no. Trust me i have a baby bird for a pet.
You should feed it.
NO! If you so much as touch a wild baby bird the mother won't take care of it and the baby will die unless you choose to care for it.
Only if you get one from a pet store can you keep a baby bird ,but not a wild one.
Wild bird seed is for all birds hence the terms WILD bird feed. All you d is but it out, bird go nuts, so do squirrels.
I rescued a baby sparrow, and he did very well on can cat food, chicken based. Get you a flat stir stick for coffee. Until he can start attempting to fly, keep him in a bowl such as a paper plate bowl, with shredded paper towel. Take a soft t-shirt material and make a small cover. He should do nicely. Babies eat about every 20 minutes, but do well not being fed during the night.
It depends on what type of bird it is. With any wild bird, do not feed it foods that it would not encounter in the wild. It is safe to buy commercial food mixes that are labeled "Wild Bird Food". Don't feed wild birds food that would be normally eaten by a pet bird.
wild bird feed(millet)
no!