Pajarita wrote:Good, then we are all in agreement and OK with the whole thing.
Now, if I may insist, Seagoat, I understand that you do daily mixes using, sometimes, the same base (did I understand that correctly?) but, if you could give us a rough estimate of the proportions of the different ingredients like, for example:
1/2 sprouted or soaked grains (and how long you soak them)
1/4 greens of cruciform
1/4 veggies and fruits
This would be very useful because, for lots of people, especially the newbies, is not enough to get a list of ingredients, they need more detailed information.
Soaking is variable to some extent. The temperature affects it. For anything that can be eaten raw you dont need to soak or sprout for as long. Any soaked seed is softer and less dry, so better for the bird. Most seeds and nuts, overnight soaking and then rinsing is good enough. you would continue letting them dry and then keeping them wet after that to make a sprout. At the point where it just sprouts it has the most nutrition and moves closer to a plant than a seed., I have been doing this for so long I just know by looking. The sprouting times in the original post is what you can use for your guide to get started.
I rotate my bases, it depends on what I have available. if I am making almond milk then sprouted almonds are available. If I am making pumpkin seed milk, then sprouted pumpkins seeds are available. I usually also have a soaked seed or sprouted seed specifically for them. There are premade seed mixes on the market that you can soak and sprout too. I am constantly changing my amounts depending on what I observe in my birds (moulting behavour, ex.) Also each parrot ate somewhat differently in the wild so I also research their normal diet to get amounts. For my Pois I make sure they get enough Selenium because Africas soil is rich in Selenium and the area I live in has no selenium present in the water, so I use raw walnuts for them often. I have posted enough for everyone to get started . Most people can just start out by adding more whole raw food.
The Parrots tell me lots too, there are a few good sources of selenium, but since my birds love walnuts, I use them often, for the selenium source. Gaugan the Red Belly, especially has a look on her face like she is in heaven when she has a walnut. The look on my daughters rescue Senegal was priceless. She had never had walnut and did not even think it was a food at first. When she first tasted it, the eye pinning, the excitment, and the look on her sweet little face was just priceless. I rotate nuts too. My two pois are from different areas of Africa. My Red Belly, will only eat, 4 fruits..... apples green grapes, yellow cherries, and papaya, so she gets more vegetables because she will eat a lot of different vegetables.