Well, I am afraid that the schedule you have him under is not going to work because birds are photoperiodic so they NEED to be kept at a strict solar schedule with full exposure to dawn and dusk or their endocrine system gets messed up. A solar schedule is, basically, what the name implies: a schedule that is based on the sun: wake up with dawn and go to bed with dusk. The trick is to expose them to the light that sets their 'internal clock' which is the different light spectrum that happens at sunrise and sunset when the sun rays hit the atmosphere at different steep angles, making the light refract in a different way from the rest of the day -and this means no artificial light exposure before the sun is up in the sky or after the sun reaches midway down to the horizon. It's not an easy thing to do for people who are not used to it but it's the ONLY way to keep their endocrine system healthy and working as it should [please research avian photoperiodism, avian endocrine system and avian reproduction]. To give you an idea, this time of the year, I open the blinds and uncover their cages at 5 am, turn on the overhead lights at 7 -7:15 am, turn them off at 6:30 - 6:45 pm and close the blinds and cover their cages at around 8:30 pm but this schedule changes as the seasons change and the days get shorter or longer -thankfully for me, I've been doing this for so long that my body has turned into a 'bird clock' on its own and the whole thing has become second nature [which drives my husband crazy
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