Due to the similarity in their habitat and feeding habits, I would assume that cockatiels like budgies eat a lot of grass seed mixes, I find them to be very limited as well as expensive so I only use them for variety in my gloop recipe once in a while at present. I have been considering trying them for sprouting which I think is what they may have been originally intended for as their primary usage. I do not know is that is what they were formulated for original, but when I look at the fact that one of the uses that is mentioned and then I look at the lack of variety in these mixes that is what I think of, sprouting.
The age of a bird when trying to improve their diet seems to be very important as there is a specific time in their development that their parents would teach them about food. That is what to eat, how to eat it, what it looks like and how to find it. Then when I look at what we do with them in this regards I have noted many times that it appears that once the bird is past this time in its normal development that it becomes progressively more difficult to get them to accept new foods. I have also noted that part of this difficulty in getting them to accept new foods appears to be the manner that we go about introducing them to the new foods.
From all of my research into foods and introducing them into the birds diet it appears to me that the best time to introduce any new food to them is after all food has been removed from their cage right after they go to sleep for the night. This produces the state of their being at their most hungry first thing in the mornings which would also be the case if the bird were in the wild. Then I read about how the parent birds would take the young newly fledged birds with them to the feeding grounds and have them perch on a branch where they would be safe. The parent birds would go and get a piece of food and bring it back to the branch and they would then show this food to their young and then they would eat it in front of the young birds. They did not offer them any of the food and then they would go and get another piece of the food and come back and repeat the same thing. finally the young birds would start to beg for the food to no avail, then they begin to demand some of the food which the parent bird also ignore, it is only after the young birds finally attempt to steal some of the food from the parent birds that the parent birds will share the food with them.
Now I am not saying that we should try to do exactly as the parents birds do, but we should be paying attention to how the parent bird do this with their young to get them to try a new food. I do think that we should perhaps borrow from them and eat the food in front of the bird that we want to try a new food and show them the food and give it to them only when they reach the point of demanding the food. I think that following the way that the parents do it can greatly increase our success in getting our birds to try new foods and then when we have gone through the foods for that morning that we should place the rest of it in their cage and let them have it and give them their usual breakfast about an hour after doing this.





