Hand Feeding Help
** Jo's Hand Feeding E-book **... Coming Soon
Hand Feeding Consultation is available by phone (fees do apply)
Please call Jo at (877) 264-2969
General Hand-feeding Information
A baby bird is born with no immune system - they receive this from their
mothers. This is one reason for the advice that follows. If you purchase babies
any younger than advised, their systems are much more delicate and you are
more likely to have problems. Purchase age depends on the species, if you are
purchasing one of the smaller birds, four weeks old and above should be fine.
The smaller species are easier to feed and wean faster. Most of them are weaned
by ten weeks. See chart below. If you are purchasing one of the larger species -
Macaws - Cockatoos - Amazons - Grays and have no experience you should purchase
your baby when he is on two feedings and eating well on his own. Any younger and
you open yourself up for problems. Keep in mind you can't find a good avian vet
open at night if you have a problem. At this stage the baby is well on its way
and the risk is minimal.
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| Approximate Growth Chart | |
|---|---|
| Species | Approximate Weaning Time |
| Large Macaws | 12-16 weeks |
| Cockatoos | 12-16 weeks |
| Amazons | 10-12 weeks |
| African Greys | 12-15 weeks |
| Large Conures | 10-12 weeks |
| Small Conures | 8-10 weeks |
| Love Birds & Cockatiels | 6-8 weeks |
This is only a guide. The baby will wean at his own pace. (And don't be surprised if your Moluccan Cockatoo wants to continue being handfeed until he's 18 years of age! Cockatoos are, after all, desperate for every morsel of attention they can get!) This pamphlet is meant to assist you in handfeeding and raising your new baby. This is meant only as a guideline.
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Here are some rules to follow:
See maximum crop capacity chart below. Keep in mind that the crop will
stretch to max capacity but as your baby gets closer to weaning the crop starts
to shrink. Please discuss this with your breeder. If possible feed the baby at
the breeders yourself. Do not let them show you how without letting you do it.
You could get your bird home and find he will not eat for you even though the
breeder had no trouble. Get complete feeding instructions from your breeder, IE:
how much, how often, when to cut back, and what to expect while weaning. The
ideal situation is to get to know your baby before you bring him home. In other
words, get a young baby, visit him often and feed several time him before you
take him home. This makes for a very low stress move on everyone's part.
FOOD ADDITIVES For Your Benefit
For the Babies Benefit
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| Approximate Feeding Capacities | |
|---|---|
| Species | Max Crop Capacity |
| Large Macaws | 120-140 ml |
| Small Macaws | 40-60 ml |
| Large Cockatoos | 50-80 ml |
| Small Cockatoos | 50-70 ml |
| Large Amazons | 60-70 ml |
| Small Amazons | 45-55 ml |
| African Greys | 50-60 ml |
| Medium Conures | 20-25 ml |
| Small Conures &Cockatiels | 12-15 ml |
| Love Birds | 5-10 ml |