by Pajarita » Wed Jan 06, 2016 12:36 pm
Ahhhh, I see. Well, all I can tell you is that the breeder who sold you this baby canary should not be breeding them because, obviously, this person doesn't have anywhere near enough knowledge to do it or care enough to learn. I know I sound terribly harsh but you have to understand that, although I love all birds, canaries will always be my biggest passion. I got my first Hartz roller as a present for my 13th birthday and have never been without them in the house ever since.... I think that I would never feel a house to be my home without the song of canaries in it. I bred them myself for many years and had stopped but will start again next year as I have finally been able to locate and acquire Discontinuous Timbrados (aka Floreados) of good blood lines (I lost the ones I got from Spain back in 2001 to a virus that gives them cancer in 2009). As a matter of fact, I am buying new cages this Saturday so I can go pick up two hens and another male next week and I am now waiting on my 'welcome' package from the Floreados y Compuestas, the very first Discontinuous Timbrados breeders association in USA, to which I have become the newest member.
Canaries don't imprint to people, my dear, so handfeeding them doesn't work the same way it does with parrots - plus, they always make good pets because they have been domesticated for hundreds of years (it's like saying that you have to raise a puppy with a bottle for it to be a good pet). Besides, handfeeding them correctly implies feeding every few minutes, something so difficult for people to do correctly that is only done in emergency situations and if the breeder really loves them (and not all breeders do, you know) because these canaries are usually never bred (they simply don't make good parents because canaries learn parenting skills from their own parents while in the nest) and some don't even develop a good song (nobody knows why). I have one, Luciano, a Classic Timbrado, that I handfed myself because the mother was not feeding it (I lost the other two babies she had) and, although he sings very nicely, his song is not as good as his father's. And that's why every good canary breeder has a good nurse or two (nurses are older hens that are not only experienced but also have proven to be good mothers - I didn't have any at the time and I blame myself for what happened) . They also never sell a baby until after the juvenile molt and NEVER EVER EVER off the nest. It's anathema to us, canary lovers. I am not blaming you or scolding you, mind you! Obviously you were not aware of any of this because I am sure that if you had, you would not have done it. Most people don't really know much about canaries even though they have been kept as pets since the 1400's... Which is a shame because they are amazing birds! I am explaining it to you so you would know.