Thanks.. mine is also a messy eater.. food is all over her face and under the neck.. i tried to wipe it with wet tissue or cotton but she hates it.. i already thought of using spray but i dont know if its advisable to bathe my 1month old cockatiel
That beautiful, wonderful little guy, certainly enjoying his breakfast bless him. Typical kiddie not a big fan of Bath days. He obviously looks to you as his mom and you love him too, I hope you have many fun and healthy years together, bless you both.👍👍👍👍👍👍
@@saratasnim6238 :( Cow passed away on Thanksgiving day. My advice, let someone who knows what they are doing hand feed. Get them once weaned. It`s heartbreaking. It`s not worth the risk. Our next birdie we got very young as well but weaned. She is very bonded to us and a happy healthy spoiled birdie. We love her and miss and regret Cow very much.
Mine is 1 month old, and when i try to feed it it doesnt even open it mouth, it goes away. I open it mouth with a small spoon and i dont know if its ok to do that or not but i cant make him more hungry i feel bad
This bird’s personality is like my bird kiwi but kiwi loves to bathe after he eats he goes to the bathroom and sits on the sink waiting for me to open the water so he can bathe
Hey guys, I see there are lots of questions in the comments... If you have any questions I can try to answer to them to the best of my abilities, however, I am no expert, I just happen to have some experience on hand feeding and weaning cockatiels Anyway, you can ask me whatever you want ^-^
Im getting a baby cockatiel maybe 2 weeks old and i need advice for hanfeeding him, someone i know had a baby cockatiel and after 1 week she stopped eating then she died and we don't know the reason and i don't want mine to not eat or get sick so what do yoi think i should do?
@@vara.x Well, first of all, I'd recommend not getting one as young as that. I got mine at that age, and let me tell you, it was a nightmare. I became exhausted to the schedule in no time, and as soon as I saw mild signs that mine could be ill I became straight up depressed and took him to the vet right away, just to find out there was nothing wrong with them. So in the first place, don't get one that's too young. I'd say that if you really want to get a young one, it is at least 4 weeks old, and doesn't only have pin feathers. Now, whether you get a 2 week old or a 4 week old, if they stop eating that will clearly be a sign of sickness. Poop might get funky looking, and even have a funny smell. This happened to my tiel and it made me worry, as most forums say that this should not be the case in a healthy cockatiel. However, mine turned out to be perfectly healthy and still had really funky poop. The main thing to keep in mind is to remember his behaviors and possible symptoms so you can recognize a disease if there's a match. The most basic thing to care about is temperature, if the temperature is right, probably everything will be alright. A baby anywhere from 1 week to 5 weeks needs to be at a temperature of 80 F as a bare minimum, 90 being the maximum. The humidity is not all that important since Australia's humidity can change drastically, and cockatiels are genetically designed to adapt to that, so get a thermometer and a brooder. As long as the temperature is right, sickness should be easily avoidable. You need to make sure you keep the cockatiel's brooder clean so they don't catch anything from decomposing poop, and also regularly check the baby's crop to make sure they don't get a sour crop. You can make your own brooder at home, since they are really expensive to buy. I'll leave you a link to a tutorial on how to DIY a brooder, and all the details to keep in mind. I personally got my tiel a critter keeper and it worked like a treat, however, as the baby gets older it will need a bigger space, so I'll leave you another link to a video on how to make an even more DIYed brooder. The temperature of the food should be between 102 F and 106 F. The safest way to check on the temperature is using a food thermometer, however, if you don't have one, you can just check the temperature on your wrist, where you can see your veins. If it doesn't burn, it's the right moment to feed it to your baby, however, it can't be too cold either. This last one is obviously less accurate, but it works perfectly fine and it is still pretty safe. If the food's too cold the baby will get a sour crop (meaning the food will stay in the crop for way too long and it will start decomposing inside the baby, leading to an infection). You can recognize sour crop by feeling your baby's crop and looking for dense, kinda hard, remains of baby formula inside the crop. If the formula is too thick, the baby won't be able to digest it fast enough, and again, this will cause sour crop, so pay attention to thickness and temperature, I will leave some links so you can go check on that info more thoroughly, and if the food is too hot, the baby will get a burnt crop (the food's so hot that it burns that baby's skin from the inside, leading the baby to feel excruciating pain. This one, however, is not so easy that your cockatiel gets it, and I know all I'm saying sounds pretty intense, but don't freak out. Trust me. At the end this is all less technical and more intuitive once you learn to understand your baby). Now, for a while, my baby refused to eat, this ended up being caused by formula that cooled off too soon inside the syringe, and also, because the way I was holding him made him uncomfortable. I had changed the way I held them without noticing, and apparently, that bothered the mister very much LOL. So I had to put the formula in the syringe while it was still a little too hot so when it cooled off inside the syringe, the temperature would be alright. I would check the temperature of the formula every time, and definitely tried different ways to hold my Sire, so he would not be bothered by my brute ways LOL. If you have any more questions at all, please, don't be afraid to come back and ask me whatever you need. I will be pleased to be of some help :D Links: DIY brooder 1: kmbreeding.weebly.com/how-to-make-a-home-made-brooder.html DIY brooder 2: (only from 7:41 to 8:57. Line the brooder with a soft cloth towel or paper towels to replace every 12 hours at the very most. You can provide heat with either a heating pad that lets you decide the temperature and hours that it will be on, or use a heating lamp of between 30 and 40 watts. Make sure to still use a thermometer to measure heat and humidity) ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-GnQgmL1QXMs.html For sour crop resources: completecockatiel.blogspot.com/2010/08/cockatiel-care-sour-crop-on-chicks.html www.beautyofbirds.com/slowcrop.html forums.avianavenue.com/index.php?threads/how-can-you-tell-a-full-crop-versus-an-empty-crop.102691/ (there's lots of good information in this last one, so you might want to go check the website out for other topics as well)
You can start bathing them when as young as five weeks old, however, mine ended up traumatized from that experience, so I'd check how they react to a little bit of water. If they freak out I'd wait till they are 8 weeks old. I know they can get stinky, and the formula can really get stuck all over their face, however, you don't want them to be problematic at bath time in the future, so, for now, I'd just use a warm, moist paper towel, regardless of how the baby reacts. Especially if they haven't turned 5 weeks yet. In any case, it is not recommended to bath them if they still have too many pin feathers, or bald spots
My bird doesn’t do that, he turns his head the other way when I try and give him the formula, can someone help? He looks exactly like the birds in the video. Little update- after watching many videos I came to the conclusion that my formula wasn’t warm enough, so I began to heat the water up more and testing it on my wrist (if it burn you it will burn the cockatiel) and he started to eat up. I am now 2 months into hand feeding and I feel like I’m a pro. I heat up a kettle full of water, and mix the formula with the heated water. Once I make sure it’s warm and won’t burn him I feed him, if the cockatiel stops eating, I plop the syringe in a glass full of the heated water so it can warm up, then try again.