by Pajarita » Fri May 02, 2014 10:28 am
Wolf is 100% correct. Kaytee Rainbow is actually not a good pellet, the birds love them but it's only because of the sugar content in them. Now, conures are fruit eaters in the wild so they will always like fruits better than veggies but they do learn to eat their veggies and, some veggies they adore (like corn on the cob, sweet peas, cooked and diced carrots, butternut squash and sweet potatoes). The trick to switching them to a better diet is presentation and timing. As Wolf said, it takes experimentation to find what and how they like best and this means throwing out a lot of good food for a long time but there is no help for it. As to timing, this is done utilizing birds natural biorhythms (they are hungriest in the morning) and 'programming' (they are hard-wired to gorge on protein) so, what you need to do is give the bird the healthy food in the morning after taking out of the cage the protein food the night before so he will be good and hungry and more receptive to trying new foods (you should also eat his breakfast with him and make a big production of the HMMMM and Yummy). I always recommend gloop, which is what I feed my birds because, in my personal opinion and experience, it's the best medium to deliver a good diet without hardship to the bird, but chop or mash will work, too. Gloop is a dish made out of cooked whole grains, pulses and cooked and chopped veggies. Mine has wheat, kamut, barley, oats, Basmati brown rice and/or black rice and/or red rice and/or wild rice, lentils, small white beans, flax and sesame seed, yellow or white sweet corn, peas, white hominy corn, carrots, broccoli and/or kale, butternut squash, green beans, sweet potatoes and one more ingredient which varies from batch to batch, it could be beets, it could be artichoke hearts, it could be palm hearts, it could be pigeon peas, etc This becomes the 'basic' recipe which I freeze in individual baggies with one daily portion in each. Every pm, I take out one baggy out of the freezer and leave it out to thaw and, in the morning, I add flavorings to it (raw veggies, naturally dried and unsulfured fruit bits, spices, etc). There is a product called 7 whole grains pilaf from Kashi that you can cook following directions and then add the veggies and stuff to make it easier on yourself. If you give your bird a measured portion (enough to fill its crop) of its protein food in the evening (I would recommend a good quality seed mix or TOPs, if you want to go the pellet route) when the sun is setting and take out the bowl once he goes to sleep and, in the morning, give him the gloop with a small sprinkle of seeds or pellets mixed in, he will start eating veggies. It will take some time but, because you will be still feeding him seeds or pellets in the evening (don't switch the pellets until he is eating the gloop in the morning unless you are going to go with the seed mix), he won't starve and, eventually, he will start eating the seeds or pellets mixed with the gloop and, in the process, he will taste it and, because you are supposed to cook the grains al dente (very firm and retaining the shape) which resembles seeds, he will start eating the grains. As time goes by, he will start trying the veggies (start with adding just corn, then when he is eating the corn, add peas, when he is eating the corn and the peas, add the carrots, see what I mean?) and, eventually, he will eat almost the whole thing (they, like people, have likes and dislikes).