beetory
New member
Hey everyone,
My name is Bee and I've had two conures for about seven years and last month my girl Darling had a swollen belly and of course, I panicked for a while wondering if she was sick but after a lot of research I came to the conclusion she was making eggs. She does live with a male but after seven whole years of her never laying an egg I stopped worrying about making sure they didn't mate. Uh, that's biting me in the butt today I guess.
I didn't want to leave her defenseless or without a space to feel safe to lay her eggs so I provided her with a nest box and she laid five eggs, unfortunately she got rid of one. It's been a whole month and the first baby hatched last night! I believe it was in the middle of the night as we did not hear his soft chirps until this morning at 6am.
Now... I'm a little bit worried because I didn't actually expect to get this far. I'm definitely inexperienced and I'm not sure what to do. I've tried researching online but unfortunately I couldn't find any concrete information. A lot of the articles and blog posts were more about discouraging your bird from laying eggs rather than what to do when they do. I've been doing my best with what I can see, though.
Now that a baby has hatched and possibly three more will be following I just want some insight on what I should do next.
I've seen some videos of "brooding" boxes and people hand-feeding the babies but I'm unsure of when I should attempt to take the babies from her nesting box to start this process. I don't want to just take them away from her, but I also don't know if her and Booger will be capable of handling the four babies and keeping them well fed. I'm totally out of my element here and any advice will help a ton!
My main concerns now are the brooding boxes, which I'm assuming are used to keep the babies warm during the day, and when I should start helping on keeping them well fed. For the feeding I know I will be needing various things but does anyone know what temperature the food should be? Whether a spoon is a good choice for someone like me that doesn't know how to feed them?
TLDR; My birds successfully made babies and now I don't know how to help them raise them.
My name is Bee and I've had two conures for about seven years and last month my girl Darling had a swollen belly and of course, I panicked for a while wondering if she was sick but after a lot of research I came to the conclusion she was making eggs. She does live with a male but after seven whole years of her never laying an egg I stopped worrying about making sure they didn't mate. Uh, that's biting me in the butt today I guess.
I didn't want to leave her defenseless or without a space to feel safe to lay her eggs so I provided her with a nest box and she laid five eggs, unfortunately she got rid of one. It's been a whole month and the first baby hatched last night! I believe it was in the middle of the night as we did not hear his soft chirps until this morning at 6am.
Now... I'm a little bit worried because I didn't actually expect to get this far. I'm definitely inexperienced and I'm not sure what to do. I've tried researching online but unfortunately I couldn't find any concrete information. A lot of the articles and blog posts were more about discouraging your bird from laying eggs rather than what to do when they do. I've been doing my best with what I can see, though.
Now that a baby has hatched and possibly three more will be following I just want some insight on what I should do next.
I've seen some videos of "brooding" boxes and people hand-feeding the babies but I'm unsure of when I should attempt to take the babies from her nesting box to start this process. I don't want to just take them away from her, but I also don't know if her and Booger will be capable of handling the four babies and keeping them well fed. I'm totally out of my element here and any advice will help a ton!
My main concerns now are the brooding boxes, which I'm assuming are used to keep the babies warm during the day, and when I should start helping on keeping them well fed. For the feeding I know I will be needing various things but does anyone know what temperature the food should be? Whether a spoon is a good choice for someone like me that doesn't know how to feed them?
TLDR; My birds successfully made babies and now I don't know how to help them raise them.