Updated Shaft-tail Diet
Posted: Mon Sep 28, 2015 1:45 pm
Hi there, everyone!
I have reviewed everyone's comments on my previous finch diet, as well as the nutritional information in the Finch Info Center, and I've made some revisions to the diet I feed:
In the evening, I will clean the finches' food plate and refill it with 1/8 cup of finch seed mix, 1/2 tsp. Quiko dry exotic egg food, and a sprinkle of "Avi-Lac Stress" supplemented seed. The birds always have a cuttlebone, fresh water, a millet spray, eggshell bits, and occasionally some health grit.
Then, in the morning when I get up for work, I will move the seed to one side of the plate and, on the other half, provide the birds with fresh moist food in three different portions:
Egg mix consisting of mashed hard-boiled egg, chunks of hulled sunflower seed, crumbled finch pellets, a little bit of chopped slivered almonds, a bit of cheese, and corn meal
Chopped greens including collard greens, endive, spring mix, some broccoli and cauliflower florets chopped fine, cabbage and carrots, and occasionally chopped spinach
"Succotash," the smallest wedge on the plate, consisting of cooked corn and peas, as well as chopped cooked legumes that are not black or castor beans
I'll also crumble some whole-grain bread onto the plate now and again, and once in a while add a little bit of banana.
How does this new diet sound, do you think? In my last diet, I included a lot of extras that may have provided too much supplementation. I want to maintain variety by feeding not only seeds but also egg food, vegetables, a little fruit, and pellets to round out the diet.
Any additional advice would be highly appreciated--thanks!
-Ember
I have reviewed everyone's comments on my previous finch diet, as well as the nutritional information in the Finch Info Center, and I've made some revisions to the diet I feed:
In the evening, I will clean the finches' food plate and refill it with 1/8 cup of finch seed mix, 1/2 tsp. Quiko dry exotic egg food, and a sprinkle of "Avi-Lac Stress" supplemented seed. The birds always have a cuttlebone, fresh water, a millet spray, eggshell bits, and occasionally some health grit.
Then, in the morning when I get up for work, I will move the seed to one side of the plate and, on the other half, provide the birds with fresh moist food in three different portions:
Egg mix consisting of mashed hard-boiled egg, chunks of hulled sunflower seed, crumbled finch pellets, a little bit of chopped slivered almonds, a bit of cheese, and corn meal
Chopped greens including collard greens, endive, spring mix, some broccoli and cauliflower florets chopped fine, cabbage and carrots, and occasionally chopped spinach
"Succotash," the smallest wedge on the plate, consisting of cooked corn and peas, as well as chopped cooked legumes that are not black or castor beans
I'll also crumble some whole-grain bread onto the plate now and again, and once in a while add a little bit of banana.
How does this new diet sound, do you think? In my last diet, I included a lot of extras that may have provided too much supplementation. I want to maintain variety by feeding not only seeds but also egg food, vegetables, a little fruit, and pellets to round out the diet.
Any additional advice would be highly appreciated--thanks!
-Ember