by Wolf » Mon Sep 01, 2014 5:22 pm
Although seeds are indeed a large portion of the budgies natural diet in the wild, I do not recall saying to feed your bird seed as opposed to pellets because the eat them in the wild. One of the reasons that I don't feed pellets is water. Pellets are very dry and this can cause dehydration issues, in my opinion, primarily with species of parrots such as the budgie who have developed water conserving abilities within their own bodies due to living in arid and semi arid habitats. Most birds only drink twice a day, once in the morning and again in the evening. This is perhaps the least of my reasons for choosing not to feed pellets. My biggest concerns are that the formulation of these pellets is based on the nutritional needs of chickens, which are not even close to the nutritional needs of parrots. This leads the pellets for our parrots being much too high in fats, proteins and sugars it also means that the balance for the vitamins and minerals is in the wrong proportions for parrots. that is why I choose to not feed them.
I can understand that you have the pellets and really don't want to just throw your money away, but he isn't eating them anyway. Perhaps you could trade them back in for a seed mix, and not lose the total cost of the pellets.
The primary reason that we don't feed dogs and cats the same diet that they would eat in the wild is actually twofold, with the first part being simply the cost of feeding them what they would have eaten in the wild. the second is that there are only two naturally occurring dogs in the entire world all of the rest of the dog breeds have never existed in the wild. And there are no housecats that were not also created by and for man. They were never wild animals, feral at times yes, but not wild.