Rookie raising birds
How to Raise Birds to Fu Heart: A Rookie Edition Guide, Easy Start but Long-Term Delightful
Starting a bird is like adding color and a vibrant atmosphere to a home. For a beginner who wants to step into the poultry lovers, getting ready not only makes the bird healthy, but also makes the babysitter happy and fun to take care of them every day. Here are some key tips to get started.
1. Choose the species that answers the lifestyle problem
Each bird species has distinctly different characteristics, habits, cries, and needs. If you are a person who likes colorful, cheerful, energetic, playful birds, and super owners like Sun Conure, it is a great choice to keep the house alive (even if you accept it with their relatively powerful greetings). But if you live in a condo or have limited space, a smaller, lighter-sounding bird like Forpus or Cockatiel might be more appropriate. Choosing a bird to match the lifestyle is the first key button. The best to make you happily feed the birds.
2. Food is the foundation of health and emotion.
Many people may still be addicted to the memory that birds eat just enough grain, which is an inerrant understanding. Birds need a variety of nutrients to complete their bodies. The main food should be a fully nutritious Pellets, supplemented by the right amount of grain, and indispensable are fresh vegetables such as corn, apples, papaya, or green leafy vegetables. Birds with full nutrition have shiny, immune, and emotional coat colors.
3.Time and attention: what birds can't live without
Birds (especially in the group of snipe) are social animals with a very high flocked instinct. When you adopt them, you are their "flock" and "family." Leaving a bird in a cage with no attention at all can cause the bird to stress, depression, or exhibit aggressive and self-plucking behavior.
A rookie should set aside at least 1-2 hours a day to play outside the cage, rub his head, practice simple skills, or even let him stick to his shoulders when you sit down at work or watch TV. Spending time together is pivotal to building trust and bond.
4. Provide a safe and livable "kingdom."
Cage: Should be spacious enough so that the bird can spread its wings to the maximum of both sides without sticking to the cage, and have room to climb.
Toys: Birds are intelligent and boring animals. There should be toys to hide the brain and relieve stress, such as wooden toys for gnawing (help sharpen the beak to the inside), ropes for clambering, or food hiding toys (Foraging toys). Switching regularly shuffles caged toys will keep the birds alert and entertaining.

















































































