Thursday, September 2, 2010

Tips For Introducing New Foods To A Picky Bird

When it comes to your feathered friends, choosing a well balanced diet is key to keeping them healthy and happy for a long time to come. But, when you have a picky bird, it can be hard to figure out what to feed them and how to introduce new foods to them. When you are ready to give them new foods that you aren't sure if they will like or not, here are some excellent tips that can help you make an introduction easier:

Start young if you can - young birds are usually much more willing to try new foods than older birds who may be "set in their ways."

If a food is totally new to a bird, it may not even recognize it as food. Offer new food in a familiar dish with other foods you know your bird already likes, and he or she may try the new food. Even if your bird only gets a taste of the new food by accident they still might decide they like it.

Place a couple of treats such as sunflower seeds, raisins or cheerios in a dish of new food. Your bird will likely get a taste of the new food while extracting the treat (the key here is to only use a couple of the treats and make your bird dig through the new food to get to them).

Offering new foods first thing in the morning is helpful, since this is when many birds naturally forage for food. Offer new foods alone first thing in the morning, and then give them their usual food a couple of hours later.

Try different forms of new foods - some birds prefer raw vegetables to cooked, while others are the opposite. Some like cooked veggies warm, others prefer them cooled. Some birds might be more willing to taste a puree or even juice made from new vegetables.

A food that is ignored in a food dish might be eaten if offered in a clip on the side of the cage or in a play area. Try weaving greens through the bars of the cage, and using a clip for slices of vegetable or fruits.

Offer a chunk of corn on the cob, which many birds like to gnaw on.

Bright orange or yellow fruits and vegetables often attract attention Try a mix of brightly colored veggies, in bite sized pieces and mixed together (cooked or raw).

Give leafy greens freshly washed and still wet and hung from a clip. The droplets of water may attract your birds attention.

Offer foods after you have a bite - watching you eat the food may be all the temptation your parrot needs. Try making a fuss, acting like this is the best food you have ever had, and maybe even feed some to another family member to help convice your parrot that this is something he/she really wants to eat!

Most birds enjoy eating freshly sprouted seeds, which are an excellent source of nutrition and are often helpful in enticing birds to make the leap from seeds to greens.

Never starve a bird into trying a new food.

Keep in mind that your bird might take a few tries with a new food or treat before they even go near it. So, don't worry if they don't take to it right away. Also, make sure that you don't leave a new treat in their cage until it rots and can cause health problems for your new bird.

2 comments:

  1. Thanks, I'll try this! My male peach-faced lovebird is a very picky eater. Sometimes he will nibble at a raw carrot, but he seems to only like its juice. Is it safe for him to have grapes or raisins?

    Also, Creme (my lovebird) has lost all his family. His mate died about two years ago, and his only son died earlier this year. I tried buying two more lovebirds to give him company (they came in a pair), but he seemed to be an outcast. So I kept the one I believed to be a female, and returned the semi-aggressive male. The one I kept (Fluff) died not even three days later. They said it was probably because of loneliness, but she was very sick (she was always fluffy, and ALWAYS sleeping!). Anyway, the point is, he is now alone again! Should I try to find a lone female friend for him, or just let him be by himself?

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  2. Love birds are a hard species to learn. While I have seen lifelong mates die within days of each other - from loneliness (or a broken heart) - I have also seen some that have taken on new friends after the loss. Make sure that you are giving him plenty of love and attention. If you want to try to introduce a new bird to him, make sure that you do so carefully and I wouldn't recommend splitting up a pair. Instead, a younger female would be best.

    As far as feeding your other guy some treats to help him get over his picky eating habits, check out this post about 10 great foods to give him: http://blog.birdlandgame.com/2010/08/top-10-tasty-nutritious-treats-to-share.html and this one about toxic foods for birds: http://blog.birdlandgame.com/2010/08/top-10-common-foods-that-can-poison.html

    I don't know that I would recommend raisins, as you never really know what all has gone into them. An organic grape or two would be a fun, juicy treat for him - just make sure that you get a seedless kind. If he is really liking the juice from fruits and veggies, I'd pick out some extremely juicy ones to give him and wean him down to those that might be less in the juice department.

    Good luck! I hope that you find a new friend for Creme. Love birds are always so unique in their personalities that it can be truly hard to make one happy again.

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