by Pajarita » Mon Aug 11, 2014 11:00 am
Welcome to the forum. I am not clear if he had black feathers before and are now turning green as he molts them or if he did not but now has black feathers. In any case, feathers that are not supposed to be black (like the primaries in a gray, for example) and either turn black or have black (stripes, spots) marks on them are caused by stress. This stress can be physical (bad diet, lack of sleep, too many hormones, etc) or emotional in origin but even emotional stress has physical consequences and 'stress bars' is one of them.
Now, I don't know whether he is kept at a solar schedule or not but this is necessary with birds because they regulate their entire endocrine system (which affects their entire body functions) through light quality and quantity. Long days all year round means breeding season all year round, something never found in nature. So up with sunrise and to bed with sunset having been fully exposed to twilight from beginning to end (so no artificial lights on until the sun is up on the sky and off when the sun is halfway down).
His diet also needs huge improvement. Fruit pellets are, as Wolf mentioned, the worst pellets there are. Birds like them and eat them eagerly because of the high sugar and protein content but they are loaded with bad stuff. I don't feed pellets, either. I've had parrots since 1992 and have done A LOT of research about their dietary needs and I've reached the conclusion that although pellets are an easy and practical solution, they are not anywhere near the best dietary option for parrots. But, when it comes to GCCs, they need less protein and more fruits than other parrots because, in the wild, they are mainly fruit eaters. Now, you say he doesn't like fruits and, although I am not calling you a liar (I am sure that you are telling the truth as you see it), I think that the problem is not that he doesn't like them but that you did not try long enough or the right way because all GCCs love fruit. The key is when and how. If you free-feed protein (putting a lot of pellets in a bowl and just leaving it there all day long), he will not eat the healthy stuff. This is because all birds are wired for protein. Simply put: they crave it. Nature made it this way because protein is necessary for breeding and there are no high protein sources of food available easily or all year round. Not in nature there aren't. People say: "But parrots eat nuts/seeds in the wild!" And, indeed they do. But trees don't produce nuts all year round and, when a flock is eating the nuts off a palm tree or whatever, we are talking about a large number of individuals eating at the same time so none of them gets that much. So, nature made it so, when they find protein, they eat and eat and eat until there is no more. This works fabulously in the wild but not in captivity because high protein does not only put them in breeding condition, it also damages their kidneys and liver. Therefore, a parrot should not be free-fed protein. It should be a measured portion (eough to fill their crop) served for dinner. Why dinner? For two reasons: 1) is that, in the winter, nights are long so you want to feed the kind of food that takes longer to digest and provides the most amount of 'fullness' for the longest time - and 2) because birds are always hungriest in the morning so this is the time of the day to get them to eat the healthy stuff (veggies and fruits- hunger been the best sauce!) which also doesn't quite last as long in their system and which will not hurt if they continue picking at it during the day.
Now, the best way to get a parrot to eat something they never ate before is to eat it yourself so, from now on, you will have to have breakfast with your parrot (his breakfast, not yours). I always say that raw green beans are not what I would call 'a good breakfast' but, sometimes, you have no choice (if you haven't figured this out already, you will find out that keeping a parrot means A LOT of sacrifices). Thankfully, fruits are not bad food for breakfast -LOL- so start by getting an organic apple (they need to be organic, regular ones have more than 40 different chemicals on them and you can't get rid of them by peeling them, either), cutting slices off it (don't peel it, most of the phytonutrients are in the peel) and, sitting down with your bird on your shoulder, start eating them making a big deal out of each mouthful. I use a phrase that I repeat every single day for my parrots. I tell them the name of the fruit and say it's good - like this: "Apple. Apple is good. It's good!" After a couple of months of hearing the same thing every morning (of course, it varies because they get a different fruit and veggie every day), they start associating the 'it's good' (I call it the 'food mantra)' with something safe to eat and would try new things when I do it. Parrots learn to eat from their parents so, in captivity, we take in the role and they learn to rely on us when it comes to certain things like judging what is good and what is not. It's not an alpha or leader role. It's more like a parent role.
All my four GCCs proved to be excellent eaters once introduced to fresh produce and they not only liked their fruit a lot, they ate prodigious amounts of them taking into consideration their small size. Try apples, grapes, blueberries, banana, cantaloupe, blackberries, oranges, etc. (but they also liked veggies with corn on the cob and baked sweet potatoes been their favorites). And keep on trying - and keep on trying - and again until he eats a large variety.