We have three green cheek conures. Two of them are a mated pair and are currently sitting on eggs. Last year, they produced eggs, but they did not hatch and seemed to break some of them. I feel very unsettled about taking the eggs out of the nest and disposing of them. I get it though. Some people have their opinion on it and that's fine--I'm not here to argue that point, but I do have a problem with it.
I have called some breeders although none of them deal specifically with green cheeks. Apparently most of them are shipped from breeders in the southern states. I have been told to leave them with the parents for the first week or so, but keep an eye on them and hand feed as necessary, then start doing it regularly by the second week. This is supposed to help with bonding with their parents? Then I was told by another breeder, to take them away from the parents because they will kill the babies and start hand feeding them around the clock from day one every 2-3 hours. Then another breeder suggested I could let the parents feed them and I could supplement, but to interact with them a lot so they are use to being held. That is as far as feeding goes...
I'm also getting mixed information on things like I should get a professional brooder, I don't need one, I can make one, leave them in the nest with the parents, etc. The parents do seem very loving and nurturing of one another and take very good care of each other and their eggs. They love to cuddle and play. They are nippy but only when Salem (the female) is in laying egg mode. Which I get--I didn't want to be disturbed while giving birth either!
There are six eggs total. 4 of which are darker when you hold them up to the light (very white in color on the outside) and slightly bigger than the other two. The other two look like you can see veins, but the coloring seems off and not as white. These were laid recently so I don't know if they need a bit more time to change in color like the others have.
I have had experience with feeding parakeets, but never green cheeks. We used two plastic containers, towels, a heat lamp, and a heating pad with the parakeets when I was growing up. We would put them in the clean bin, and disinfect the other--so it was easier to keep their space clean and always have a fresh bin ready to move them into. We would heat it up with the heating pad before we moved them so it was nice a warm, and then move them in and set it so half of it was under the heat lamp so they could move in and out as needed. My mom would adjust and check on them--like she could tell by how they were acting if they were too cold or too hot. She could even just feel with her hand and know if the space was the right temperature or not. I don't know if I'm that good, but I do have thermometers!
Does anyone have any advice as I have had a lot of conflicting information? Will the parents really kill the babies? Is this something I need to be worried about and prepared for to remove the eggs as they are hatching?





