peppero1
07-06-2006, 02:09 AM
If your bird is/was addicted to seeds you will know how happy I am that I have finally been able to switch my bird over to a healthier pellet diet.
I tried many times to offer a better diet to my bird but he was very rigid in his diet. He is usually scared of anything I offer him to eat and if i keep holding it out to him he will eventually get mad and nip at me.
But anyway, recently he started to loose feathers and not look so healthy so I decided that it's probably a result of springtime molting and also insufficient diet. Even at the best of times his feathers are terribly sparce and uneven. Not thick and robust like many lovebirds I see in the stores. So, I decided to take the "tough-love" route and stop giving seeds. Over the course of three days I gave him fewer and fewer seeds and more and more pellets. On the last day he was very angry and agitated. He even took to scrounging on the floor for anything that resembled a seed. And then after some encouragement he started to eat only the orange pellets and now the last three days he is eating them all.
I am so glad because the pellets provide a healthier base diet than seeds alone and so I am expecting him to have more energy and look better in time. Currently I only give him a few seeds in the morning by hand, at breakfast time, and in the evening as a treat, which he readily takes.
Perhaps in the future I can give him vegtables and other items to round out his diet, but at least now he is on the road to improvement.
What's the moral of this tale, well it's simply this:
"Don't buy a bird that is weened on seeds alone. Eventually their health will suffer because of it, and they won't be as energetic and responsive. And just when you have them fully integrated into your life, they may even die because of related lack of nutrition illnesses."
I tried many times to offer a better diet to my bird but he was very rigid in his diet. He is usually scared of anything I offer him to eat and if i keep holding it out to him he will eventually get mad and nip at me.
But anyway, recently he started to loose feathers and not look so healthy so I decided that it's probably a result of springtime molting and also insufficient diet. Even at the best of times his feathers are terribly sparce and uneven. Not thick and robust like many lovebirds I see in the stores. So, I decided to take the "tough-love" route and stop giving seeds. Over the course of three days I gave him fewer and fewer seeds and more and more pellets. On the last day he was very angry and agitated. He even took to scrounging on the floor for anything that resembled a seed. And then after some encouragement he started to eat only the orange pellets and now the last three days he is eating them all.
I am so glad because the pellets provide a healthier base diet than seeds alone and so I am expecting him to have more energy and look better in time. Currently I only give him a few seeds in the morning by hand, at breakfast time, and in the evening as a treat, which he readily takes.
Perhaps in the future I can give him vegtables and other items to round out his diet, but at least now he is on the road to improvement.
What's the moral of this tale, well it's simply this:
"Don't buy a bird that is weened on seeds alone. Eventually their health will suffer because of it, and they won't be as energetic and responsive. And just when you have them fully integrated into your life, they may even die because of related lack of nutrition illnesses."