by Pajarita » Sun May 18, 2014 7:38 pm
Actually, all lovebirds eat the same thing, at least all of mine did and I had peachface, fischer's, black mask and black cheek as well an entire clutch of hybrids I got from a lady in Philadelphia. They are not big fruit eaters but they do love leafy greens and cooked veggies. Mine ate the same gloop I give to all my parrots along with one fruit, one veggie and one leafy green or cruciform in the morning and, for dinner, they got a small psittacine seed mix with some striped sunflower seed. They loved the gloop and ate everything in it, grains, pulses and veggies. They are actually very good eaters but, of course, I had the advantage of having so many and, when you do, there is always one or two that have been there longer and would eat anything and the newer ones would just copy them. But the transitioning gloop works for everybody, even the ones that are alone. What you need to do is give him his seed mix dinner in the evening (this time of the year, in the USA Northeast, it would be around 7:15 pm) and, as soon as he's done and getting ready to roost for the night, take the bowl away. In the morning, wait a bit after sunrise (say, 8 am around here) to get him good and hungry and give him whole grains (I always use wheat kernels, oat groats, pearled barley, brown rice and kamut but I always add some other type of rice like black or red or wild -which is not rice at all but the birds love it) cooked al dente (firm and all separated, not sticking to each other at all) - this is easily achieved by putting the grains in a lot of water and, once they are done, draining them in a colander. Now, not all these grains cook in the same period of time so what I do is mix the ones that do so I cook all the rices together (I also add the lentils to them because they cook in the same time as the rices); the oats and the barley in another pot and the wheat and the kamut in another. Once they are all done and thoroughly drained, mix them together, add some small white beans (you can use a can but rinse them well to get rid of whatever salt they might have), some flax and some sesame seed (not too much, they are good but they are also quite oily). In the morning, put the cooked grains and beans in his food bowl, sprinkle a bit of seeds on top, mix them together and serve either at room temperature or a bit warm. He will start by picking just the seeds out of it but, sooner or later, he will go for one of the grains or the beans and he will like it and, before you know it, he will be eating it without a problem. When you see that this has been happening for three or four days in a row, eliminate the seeds. Once he is eating the mix without seeds, add sweet corn to the mix, once he is eating this, add peas and carrots - then chopped broccoli (the one that comes frozen in a bag labeled 'chopped broccoli', not the 'florets' and not the 'pieces' unless you want to chop them up in the food processor) - then baked sweet potatoes and butternut squash (they sell them already cubed and frozen in Whole Foods -as a matter of fact, with the exception of the chopped broccoli, you can find everything else in Whole Foods).
The final product should be 50% grains/pulses and 50% veggies.
I feed all my parrots gloop, from the budgies to the cockatoos, the difference in their diets is through the amount of green, fruit, veggie and type of seed mix as well as whether they get nuts or not and how many. The lovies do better with a bit more protein than the budgies.