Last Updated on by Mitch Rezman
Hello,
Thank you for many years of great information and resources!
I have a 9 year old Cinnamon Fallow GCC.
I got him when he was five months old.
My question is, do you know of any tricks to get him to eat vegetables?
I read over and over that his diet should consist of many of them.
I bought him from a pet store that had been feeding him Higgins and that is all I can get him to eat to this day, as his main staple diet.
I have followed and tried many of your recommendations for premium bird foods and have only ever managed to get him to eat one bite.
He just flat-out, refuses to eat until I start to become concerned because he is not eating at all, usually two days is all I can handle.
I have tried every vegetable on the approved list for conures, many recipes for “chop”, including all of the vegetables I won’t eat myself, lol.
I tried all of them RAW at first and then went through the whole list again trying them cooked.
He will eat a variety of fresh fruit and wants to sample anything he sees as food.
I have tried very hard to limit his sampling of human food, but he insists on trying whatever I am eating, he’s very persistent and pouts if he doesn’t get his way.
Yes, he is a spoiled brat, but I love him more than anything and want to give him as long a life and as healthy and happy a life as I can.
Any advice or suggestions would be very much appreciated,
Thank you,
Summer
Dear Summer
To start with, you have kept him alive for 9 years so you are doing something right. Don’t beat yourself up too much.
Ideally, when you brought him home that would have been the best time to offer veggies. But that ship has sailed.
We have 10 birds, all from rescues and I have found that the best way to get them to eat veggies is to see the other birds eat them.
If you only have one bird then you are the other bird.
That he wants to eat what you are is a good start. Let him have all he wants to eat.
Now are YOU eating the right foods so if he steals a few bites he is on the right track?
If you are eating chips and cookies and mashed potatoes and pasta, then he will want that too. How about when you make yourself a salad? Or a stir fry? Monkey see, monkey do.
I make up 6 dishes of bird veggies daily as we have 10 birds, consisting of 6 budgies (one big cage), 2 cockatiels (each with its own cage), and an African Ringneck and a Quaker. (also each with their own cages).
I agree that most CHOP recipes are much too fussy and messy and do not improve after having been thawed out.
Chop also lacks much needed amino acids and protein.
I guess I do a CHOP LITE daily. So I keep a few staples on hand for it.
Frozen mixed veggies (corn, peas, carrots, lima beans, store brand is fine)
Frozen corn (store brand is fine)
Fresh Kale (I buy the smallest bunch in the produce section)
Fresh apples
I use a small chopper that fits on my blender but there are also small electric choppers that work very well.
I make a fresh veggie meal every morning.
In the open chopper, I drop in some kale, and a couple spoons of thawed mixed veggies and a little extra corn (they all love the corn), then drop in a couple apple wedges and if I have them, a couple grapes.
Then I whir it all together and it is chopped up in seconds.
Now the budgies like their food small and I put a pile into two wide dishes for the 6 budgies to share.
The Quaker and the Ringneck, I give them a dish with a few cut up bits of apple and a half a grape each, a few kernels of corn and then top with a small wad of chopped veggies.
The cockatiels both are not big eaters of the stuff, but they still get a dish EVERY DAY. They get a single apple wedge and topped with a wad of chopped veggies.
Now at the end of the day (we pull the dishes about 2-4 pm) I swear the dishes don’t look like they have been eaten a lot of, but I feel like I have done all I can for them.
We also provide drinking water daily fortified with bird multi-vitamins.
TIPS:
I keep the frozen veggies in the freezer, but I use 3 small plastic containers to hold a couple of days worth each of the corn, the mixed veggies and the apple/grapes in the fridge to pull from, then replenish every other day.
The kale, I learned how to keep it fresh longer in the fridge by standing up the leaves in a tall rectangular Tupperware-type container. It lasts as long as 2 weeks, sprinkle in a little water, but not a lot. Leave the lid cracked some so it is not too humid inside. If it turns yellow, it is time to toss and get a new bunch.
I don’t freeze my chop, the kale would get mushy (and nasty in my eyes). I just make it and offer it fresh daily.
When I started offering it to the budgies they turned their nose (beaks?) up at it, but once I sprinkled some millet on top, they dove right in, tasted it and started eating more.
Your bird is sized between the cockatiels and the Quaker/Ringneck, so you may need to experiment to see how he likes his corn, etc.
Chopped or just thawed? Years ago when I only just had one Indian Ringneck, he didn’t get small chopped veggies. I was able to just give him a daily dish of the thawed corn and mixed veggies, apple bits and cut up grapes.
All of our current birds being rescues, came from homes where they didn’t get veggies. Over time they all will eat SOME of the daily dish, even if it is just a tiny bit. I feel I have done the right thing for them.
So, I hope you can get somewhere.
If not keep letting him eat some of your dinner.
Catherine
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6 Oct 2024My African Greys are 42 years old. I have raised one from egg, the other I got him before he had his “tube” feathers. Every day they get ORGANIC mixed vegetables (frozen) with organic no salt chic peas in the mix. I microwave to defrost on very low power. In the bowl they also get organic brown rice & organic Quinoa cooked & frozen stored in small glass containers then defrosted in refrigerator and used over the week. They also get some protein- cooked chicken, or meat. The female loves the chicken leg bone & eats the marrow. I know people are shocked that I give them meat but you can’t force a bird to eat what it doesn’t want to and my birds are well fed so they don’t have to eat meat (low fat no seasonings) but they want it. My birds feathers are gorgeous & they look forward to their dinner every day around 2 pm. With the chicken leg-also no antibiotics, no hormones & make sure never bloody, well cooked and cool. When I see a feather plucked bird I recommend meat and in half the cases the bird stops picking. Plus I look at the rest of their died. Sadly one owner was feeding her Grey outdoor bird seed that was old , dirty & moldy. When I took over feeding the parrot within a month he was looking 100% better.