by Pajarita » Sun Aug 31, 2014 9:47 am
Yes, the light specs are correct. What I would do if I lived so far up North is to reproduce, as much as possible, a sunrise and a sunset so, for the sunrise, I would start off by uncovering their cage and turning on a red light in a lamp that allows me to control the intensity of the light (dimmer) and start with the lowest intensity and the lamp on the floor and kind of far away from their cage. In ten minutes, I would lift the lamp a bit (like on a low stool or a coffee table) and increase the intensity to the medium setting. In another ten minutes I would start with a white light (I don't think you can get full spectrum lights that dim so you might have to use a regular light bulb) in a low setting on top of the coffee table, then on top of a regular table and at full intensity and, finally, turn on the full spectrum lights overhead. And, for the sunset, you do the opposite. This is important because with a mated pair, you want to keep their sexual hormones only flowing during breeding season or the male will become aggressive, very defensive of the female and extremely possessive of the cage (which will be regarded as their nest -this is the reason why he tried to bite you when you were cleaning it).
Grays are not easy birds to switch to a good diet, at least, they have not been in my personal experience. It's not impossible but it's just not as easy as with other species like conures or amazons. It just takes more time, that's all. Your best bet is to cook whole grains (wheat, barley, oats, brown rice, etc). You start with cooking them to a very hard texture (so they would resemble seeds in texture) and offering them by themselves, once you see them eating them without a problem (you should always offer them in the morning after taking away their seeds the night before after they eat dinner -they should get about 1/4 cup of seeds each but get a cockatiel mix, not a parrot mix), you start adding some vegetables to it. Start with fresh corn, they all like it and go for it without a problem. Once they are eating it, add peas. Then diced carrots, then chopped broccoli, like that, slowly and gradually. You can also try giving them barely boiled corn on the cob (I don't know of a single species of bird that doesn't love corn on the cob), a nice piece of apple and a celery stalk stuck between the bars of the cage (they also all love apple and celery -celery is not what you would call nutritious but they love the salty taste of it and it's a good way of getting them used to eating greens. My grays like crunchy (like the romaine hearts, bok choy stalks, etc) and juicy (they love to suck the juice out of fruits like watermelon and oranges) but they all have their individual tastes and before you can figure out what they like best, you need to teach them to eat a variety. I eat in front of them and always repeat the same phrase (like "apple, apple is good, it's good") because it creates a conditioned response in them and, after a while, anything you offer using the 'it's good' phrase will be accepted as something good to eat.