Hello there !

Nice to meet you! :) I am Bhavya, the bird sitter @ BirdieBnB. This website is designed by myself for helping out the bird parents in purchasing the right products than spending money on fancy bird products. The products listed are practically very useful and recommended by many bird parents including myself.

Birdie Cookie

 Homemade  Birdie Cookie : 

Ingredients

1/4th of a steamed sweet potato . 
Birdie flour  ( 2 tbsp powdered pellet ,1 tbsp wheat flour, 1 tbsp powdered oats ) 
Seeds , pellets , millet spray  ( 1tbsp ) 
Water if needed to knead the dough 

Procedure
Step 1. Mix all together to knead to make the dough 
Step 2. Use water to flatten it and cut into any shape. 
Step3: Heat a pan and cook both sides for 1-2 minutes. 

Your birdie treat is now ready . 

It’s nom nom time for birdies . Yayy !!!

Dealing with Eggs

How to Deal with the Eggs

Find out if your bird is a deterministic egg layer. 

Following are some suggestions, however, if your bird lays an egg, you should consult your avian vet to find out whether your bird (species) is a determinate or indeterminate layer. Identifying which type your bird is will probably dictate how you want to handle the situation.

If she has already laid one or more eggs, allow her to lay a full clutch of 3-5 eggs and sit on them for 3 weeks or until she abandons them. This usually reduces the total number laid in a give time period. Removing the egg immediately will stimulate her to lay another within a few days.

If your bird lays eggs, place them in an open container, such as a small cardboard box within her cage. Line the box with pine shavings to prevent the eggs from breaking. Do not give her a nest box, as this will encourage her to continue laying eggs. Do not remove the eggs right away, as she will simply lay more to replace them. Instead, wait until she has stopped sitting on the eggs, then remove both the eggs and the container.

This will allow the bird to try to go through her normal behaviours after laying the eggs. If she is actively sitting on a clutch of eggs, she is less likely to continue laying. If her eggs keep being taken away, she may continue to lay eggs until she has what would be a full clutch of eggs for her species. If the bird has absolutely no interest in the eggs, they can be taken away. If your bird is sitting on the eggs at the bottom of the cage, make sure her food and water are easily accessible and monitor her carefully to ensure that she is eating and drinking sufficiently. Dummy eggs are available for purchase online and can sometimes be used in place of real eggs if the real eggs are getting broken


**Credits : 
mickaboo.org
www.forthebirdsdvm.com
www.aav.org


Discourage Egg laying

 How to discourage egg laying ? 

Providing proper, non-incandescent lighting, a healthy diet, and adequate sleep, as well as removing nesting toys or materials are key to discouraging egg laying.

Diet : 

Diet should consist of foods that are not warm or soft, or high in calories and fat.

The reason diet should not include warm and soft food is because that kind of food simulates the regurgitated food that  mates feed to each other, and to their babies.   If food is plentiful (lots of calories), that signals that it's spring and time to make babies (because food is plentiful).

So, in order to minimize hormonal feelings, diets should consist of a large proportion of vegetables and leafy greens, supplemented by high-quality pellets (preferably organic) to ensure proper nutrients.

Berries like blueberry and acai berry can be used as treats. Seeds and nuts should be given very sparingly and only as treats. Avoid sweet fruits like apple and grapes.

Foraging

Food should not appear to be plentiful and should take effort to find. 

When food is plentiful, it triggers your bird to start thinking about making babies. To minimize this, introduce your bird to foraging. 


Feeding Method

Food should “run out” occasionally, not always be available. 

Food should not appear to be too plentiful.  So, cut back on your bird's foraging so that the bowls are empty of food by the time you get home for dinner. You can do this by either giving her less foraging or increasing the amount of shells and inert material in the mix. Ideally the edible food in her foraging should last until a few hours before you get home, so that she is without food for a couple of hours. Remove the bowls when you come home and feed her dinner outside of her cage.

Vegetable skewers can last the entire day. Vegetables are high nutrition, but relatively low calorie. Feed outside of cage or, if you feed inside the cage, remove all food before bed. Remove all food, including foraging bowls and skewers, from cage when she goes to bed.

Toys : 

Remove your bird’s “love-toys”. Some single birds will display mating behaviors with objects in their environment, such as food cups, toys, perches, or mirrors. Mating behaviors include regurgitating food, vent rubbing, and tail lifting. If your bird engages in these behaviors with an inanimate object, that object should be permanently removed from her environment.

Cage

Create an environment that is not nesty or dark. Remove anything that can be viewed as a nest box or nesting material. Put papers under the cage grid, to avoid access to paper, bedding, or potential nesting material. Remove access to dark enclosed spaces. Distract her by moving or remodeling her cage when she starts to act "nesty."

Rearrange the cage interior and change the cage location. Your bird is more likely to lay eggs in a cage that hasn’t changed in a while. Putting your bird in a different cage and/or changing the cage location can help discourage laying. Changing the arrangement or types of toys, dishes, and perches in the cage can also be very helpful.

Limit Petting

Do not touch your bird below the neck!!! Don’t send your bird mixed signals when you pet her. Touching your bird's underside and lower back or abdomen can trigger a hormonal response, as your bird thinks you are offering yourself as a mate. In nature, birds only touch each other below the neck when they are courting and getting ready to repLimit petting to gently scratching the head, neck, and upper body area.

Some birds will display breeding behaviors with their favorite person, such as vent-rubbing, tail lifting, or regurgitating food. Discourage these behaviors by putting your bird back in her cage for a “time out” whenever she displays them.

Sleep

Provide more quiet sleep time. Provide at least 12 hours of sleep. If she is still tending to lay eggs, try 13. Use a cage cover, proper lighting during the day (so that she fully wakes and is tired at bedtime).

Put your bird to bed early, by 5 or 6:00 p.m. A long day length is one of the most important environmental cues triggering egg laying in birds. By allowing your bird to stay up late, you are mimicking the long days of spring/summer, making your bird think it is time to breed. An early bedtime will help to turn off her breeding hormones. Note that she will need complete darkness and quiet for this to be effective (covering the cage while the radio or TV is on is not adequate!).


***Disclaimers : 
These are not my words , I just copy pasted the points I felt is 100% right onto this website. 
All the credits goes to : 
mickaboo.org
www.forthebirdsdvm.com



Egg laying in Pet birds

 Egg laying in pet birds can be a serious health threat.

Female pet birds can also lay eggs, even without the presence of a male. Such eggs are infertile and will not hatch, even if incubated.

Constant egg laying will deplete your bird of vital nutrients, and predispose her to malnutrition , osteoporosis, and life-threatening health problems, such as egg binding and yolk peritonitis. 

While egg laying can occur in any breed, it is most common in cockatiels, lovebirds, budgies, canaries, and finches. Egg laying can start anytime from 5 months to over 10 years of age.

If you find an egg, you want to immediately correct any environmental factors that predispose your bird to lay eggs. If that does not work, your bird may require medical treatment to control egg laying, so you’ll want to get her to a qualified Avian vet. There are several safe, effective hormonal treatments available, which your Avian vet can tailor to your bird's needs.


**Content from : 
mickaboo.org
www.forthebirdsdvm.com