Post
by cindy » Thu Jul 30, 2009 11:33 am
Ursula wrote:CandoAviary wrote:That's what I was thinking too. But I also know sometimes captive raised birds loose some of thier wild instinct common sense.......
Wild birds do not eat poison plants but a captive bird will

Wild birds will gobble up mealies though and I trust they wouldn't if they weren't good for them and their babies. I wouldn't want to add up how much money we spend on mealworms for the birds in the yard alone. We already fed generations of bluebirds, wrens, chikadees, bluejays, etc over the last 8 years that we live here...

I would just stay away from feeding insects with larger than mealworm pinches/mouths. Most birds that eat them play with them a bit and instinctively know to how to eat them. The mealworms this myth talks about are the larger size grubs (huge waxworms) that do bite. Things get lost in the translation of things, you know through the "grape vine" syndrome!
When we were feeding large waxworms to our bigger lizards we were told by one reptile dealer to pinch the heads off and feed the body immediately to the lizard. This was done mostly becasue of the mouth piece of the grub. We just switched to the larger mealies because I got pinched a few times.
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