Introducing fruits and veggies to lovie

Chandler6611

New member
Feb 15, 2014
18
0
Dallas Texas
Parrots
Tea spoon the peach faced love bird
and Trouble the white faced love bird
I have been trying to give my love bird fruits and veggies along with her normal food mix. Problem is she could care less about them and won't even touch them. Have anyone else had this trouble? I want to keep her in the beat health that I can:confused:
 
Yes the birds r smarter then most people they won't eat any GMO fruit . Try organic fruit the label on the fruit always starts with number 9 those fruits they eat no problem
 
I basically just said this on another post, so sorry if it sounds like a repeat.

Others have mentioned trying to eat some in front of her, or eat with her. I added the following.

I agree with the suggestions so far, but let me add some. Try frozen veggies, still frozen. Try cooked veggies. Try them in spears, try them in cubes, try them chopped into teeny tiny pieces. Try offering one at a time, try offering them all at once. Try putting them in a treat cup, try setting them wherever she plays, try wedging them through the bars, try putting them in her food dish, try putting them in her water dish, try wedging them in her favorite toy, try putting them on the top of the cage where she can get them while hanging upside down. Try offering them before breakfast, when she is hungry, and leaving them for a while before feeding the normal pellets. Try mixing them with her regular food, try stringing them kabob-style on a zip-tie and attaching them to the cage, plays stand, or anything else. Try feeding them to the dog if you have one. Try some dried fruits and veggies, try mixing them with nuts. Try transitioning to cereal first (like Post Great Grains) in a treat cup, then adding fruits and veggies later. Try handing them to her, try tossing them to her, try throwing them on the floor when she is playing. Try putting them where she "can't get them," try zip tying a carrot to the top of her favorite perch so she sits on it. Try putting them on a zip tie or something and dangling them from the top of the cage, play stand, or perch. Try putting them on your shoulder while the two of you watch TV. Try varying the colors - I had a budgie who would ONLY eat Purple cabbage, not green cabbage! Try different textures, and don't forget those leafy greens! My birds are especially fond of raw spinach. If they don't like the big leaves, try shredding your greens and piling them on a play stand or the top of a cage where they can be pulled down and played with. In general, try thinking of ways to get your birds to PLAY with it rather than to eat it. Playing leads to eating =D

All that said, be SURE to remove them no later than the end of the day. If you put them with the food, be sure not to leave it too long. If the pellets have time to get soft, throw the whole thing out. If you put it in the water, leave it for no more than 2 hours. If it looks wilty, it has been there too long.


Not comfortable putting things in your bird's water dish? Add a bird bath and put it in there. Flick LOVES bobbing for corn kernels in his bathing dish, and dunks almost all of his food in there anyway. Just be sure the water is shallow enough that while they may have to put some effort into getting the treat, they should never have to dunk their nostrils into the water.

Above all, BE PATIENT! It took one of my cockatiels over a year to start eating the veggies I was giving her. If you don't want to "waste money" trying for that long, eat everything yourself That way you can boost your diet and your bird's, no money wasted! Having birds has helped me consume more veggies, and I love it! (I do not mean you should eat it after it has been in a bird cage, just that you can eat the rest of what you buy if it doesn't make it into the cage)

If you must cheat, here is an idea. I am glad they are on pellets, but seeds can be used as treats. Put a treat cup in the cage and feed a FEW seeds, millet even, every day for a week. I am talking no more than a teaspoon full of seeds, just enough to establish it as "the super yummy bowl of treats." Then add your fruits and veggies there, chopped small. Maybe the association will help.

A note on health: You can never feed too many veggies, but you can feed too many fruits. Fruit is great, but try to make the majority of your fresh treats veggies. Like their human families, many of our birds are getting way too much sugar, even if it is from fruit. I try to offer at least 3 types of veggies for every fruit I offer.

Best of luck!
 

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