I recently got my first Green cheek conure its possibly a turquoise because of the greenish blue color. Its around 3-4 weeks old, I wanted to ask about the feeding schedule the timings i do are every 6 hours. 6Am 12Pm 6Pm 12Am and repeat but i recently found about giving feeding a break at night for 8hours. How will i adjust my schedule?
I recently hand fed a budgie from hatching. I didn't adhere to a schedule. The parent birds feeding their chicks obviously don't- they feed on demand, so that's what I did. When Rocky, my baby budgie, was hungry she would make it known by peeping at first, then by chirping louder and louder as she grew. After feeding she would fall asleep pretty quickly but would wake up hungry again in a few hours so I fed her on demand. I definitely didn't go six hours without feeding during the day until she was about four weeks old.
I wanted Rocky to grow up feeling secure and self confident and I did not want her to cry (chirp) for food and not be fed. I believe it builds trust if the chick knows that it's cries for food will not be ignored by you, the surrogate parent.
During the first two weeks I fed Rocky every two to three hours around the clock (yes, I was exhausted).
During the third week I would give the final feeding at midnight and the first feeding in the morning at 6am, so there was a six hour break and the time between daytime feedings went to about every four hours.
By the fourth week I would stretch the nighttime fast to seven hours and the daytime feedings would be about every five hours or so, but it was up to her. If she cried I fed her.
If at any time Rocky woke up at night "crying" I would get up and feed her- I never let her cries go unanswered. Don't worry it won't spoil your baby to respond like this and the hand feeding period will be over before you know it! I also never used a syringe to feed Rocky, even when she first hatched and only weighed two grams (at four weeks she weighed 50 grams). I used a human baby sized teaspoon. I would hold the baby with her head between my thumb and forefinger and tap the edge of the spoon to her beak and she would lap up the formula from the spoon. I was afraid that if I used a syringe I risked pushing too much food into her mouth at once and she would aspirate the food and die. I let Rocky eat as much as she wanted at each feeding. When she had enough to eat she would stop. Then I wiped her beak, face and neck off with a baby wipe she would fall asleep within minutes.
Rocky weaned onto tiny pellets much easier than I expected at about six weeks.
I hope this was helpful. Enjoy your baby! They grow up so quickly!