I'd be interested to hear what you think about TOPS Parajita in particular which use no synthetic vitamins and are 100% organic when they are fed in combined with a balanced diet or fresh foods, pulses and 'table foods'- pasta, rice, etc. They are actually less in Vitamin A and D3 (which people criticize) but as you say they can easily be supplemented in other ways with natural foods. One or two vitamins is easier to put in than a whole host of them, which is done by the pellets. As they were developed on cockatiels the protein level is fine. In fact the website even says they are meant as a supplement to a balanced diet.
Also the blandness- not with TOPS my birds love them and go after them like they are very tasty! They even lick the bowl clean of dust! But then I don't just feed them that so I guess to them they like it being a different taste. Also birds sense of taste is a lot different than a human's they can taste things we can't and visa versa so there's not really an adequate test of that.
As I said previously its very difficult for people to understand when you have collective knowledge we don't have. For example, Michael created a whole forum out of his knowledge- thus its easier for us to understand his convictions (even if on occassion you don't agree) because all his knowledge is there, accessible and readily available. I think this is where we are all running into difficulties.
Using pellets doesn't make us bad people- I did a lot of research around what was a 'good pellet ' when I landed on TOPS more recently however I've never experienced a problem with feeding Harrison's although I feel TOPS is a better pellet. Further research and avian professional advice lead me to the diet I have now as well as previous experiences. The diet I feed is just an alternative method it doesn't make anyone's superior over the other.
http://totallyorganics.com/t-pellets.php
As you can see also NO soy and they are cold pressed so they don't lose vitamins.
The dryness is easily overcome by a balanced diet where moisture can be derived as Marie83 keeps saying.
Also the balance as I keep saying can be rectified by the portions of pellets in conjunction with other things. I think you think we all feed them pellets and nothing else. Pellets are just a small (or larger depending on pellet or bird) part of a wider diet. No one is saying that one brand of pellet will provide for every single species without feeding other foods, but that's where percentages and species specific research comes in. The pellets full the gaps you can't without extremely in depth knowledge or covers your bases with the things your fresh parts or pulse parts or 'table' food parts aren't covering It's more of a safety net in my case with my cockatiels.
its all about how you apply the pellets into wider areas of the diet and when used correctly and as part of something bigger its not the terrible awful thing that's going to kill your bird but instead help them to have a more rounded diet.
At least IMO, for what its worth, which is probably miniscule considering the lack of knowledge I seemingly have...






