Here is some information I was referring to start off:
http://www.onafricanwings.com/FoodManagement.htm
Also, just to let you know, my 2 old lovebirds are not part of this "experiment" as their food is already specifically mixed and weighed every day, so they remain on free feed... for now at least.
So we today, January 1st, Pesho, Akilles and Echo did Day 1:
- this morning i weighed the birds after their morning poop (they had no food in their cages overnight) and their weight was normal
- I gave them a breakfast bowl, containing about 10% of each bird's weight (it is MORE than required, but I decided to let them pick and choose what they prefer for today): so that would be about 5-6 Harrison's pellets (3 for the ringneck) = 10 grams, plus about 15 grams of vegetables (sprouts and carrot rounds).
- they went, they looked, the munched a bit but looked a bit surprised that THIS WAS IT!!!! No full bowl of pellets + another full bowl of sprouts, nono, this is IT! So I had to leave in the bowls for about 1 hour - 1 hour and a half... observing that everybody had seen and possibly eaten something!!!
- then I removed the bowls, weighed the remainder in each one... ok they really didn't eat much
During the rest of the day, all pellet bowls were removed from the T-stands and cagetops so no more buffet....
At one point in the afternoon my boyfriend chose to give them a bowl of pellets for 1 hour only... to see if they're hungry perhaps? They actually seemed ok, didn't overeat... so bowls removed again!
Finally tonight, as we speak, they were weighed again and given a bowl of pellets (about 10 each) and some papaya, back to their cages to eat for an hour. Then bowls removed and it's bedtime....
So this is for today.
Also I'd like to say that we do trick train our birds, with a clicker training, we are just starting and its really the basic tricks, wave, turn around, etc... We do 1 session per day, and the treat of predilection for the moment is sprouted sunflower seeds or sometimes an almond.... so ...
That's where we're at!
I'd be glad to get some advice for the next days.







