Help with baby falling or thrown out of nest.
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Help with baby falling or thrown out of nest.
Our Society Finches laid 5 eggs and this morning we found a hatchling that in our opinion was thrown out of the nest along with the shell of the egg. We put it back in the nestbox but are concerned it could happen again. Our cage is quite large for an indoor finch cage. We have 2 Society Finches, 3 Spice, and one Bronze wing. Does anyone have any ideas on why the baby was thrown out? Or any suggestions on how to prevent this in the future? Any advise would be GREATLY appreciated.
- Sally
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There are many reasons for a tossed baby--parents are inexperienced, baby is not normal, parents feel nest and babies are threatened, parents decide food supply is not sufficient, etc. Societies are usually good parents. Sometimes, babies get dragged out of the nest accidentally when the parents fly out. That is one reason to not disturb the nest too much. Do the other birds show any interest in the Society nest?
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Yes, the other birds have shown interest in the nestbox. Before the eggs were laid it was where they all gathered at night to sleep. After the eggs were laid, the parents threw everyone else out. The other birds are now sleeping on a perch. There are 2 other empty nestboxes which they show no interest. Since we put the baby back in the nestbox it seems the parents are feeding it but not positive. The parents are really going after an egg mixture recipe found in a forum at this site. This is the parents first clutch.
- SamanthaL
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- fairestfinches
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Sally is right. . .It could be lots of things.
From the sound of it the chick was knocked out by accident. It is rare for Society finches to be poor parents and toss chicks intentionally. The Bronze Wings and Spices tend to be very easy going passive species so I'd be suprised if they had much to do with it.
If the parents are really hitting the egg food then they are most likely feeding the chick.
We'll keep our fingers crossed for you. Keep us posted.
From the sound of it the chick was knocked out by accident. It is rare for Society finches to be poor parents and toss chicks intentionally. The Bronze Wings and Spices tend to be very easy going passive species so I'd be suprised if they had much to do with it.
If the parents are really hitting the egg food then they are most likely feeding the chick.
We'll keep our fingers crossed for you. Keep us posted.
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Unfortunately 2 more babies were on the bottom of the cage tonight. One dead, one alive. There is one live baby and 2 unhatched eggs left out of 5. We are going to look into hand feeding if it is even possible. It is so sad to lose the babies. It is awful to see the 3 babies suffer. We need to do something about this....
- Sally
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So sorry you are losing babies. It is the down side of breeding finches--it is almost a given that you will lose some along the way. As fairestfinches said, Societies are usually good parents, so perhaps they are very young. If you decide to handfeed, there are excellent articles at the Finch Information Center, linked at left. Also read Hilary's thread about Blue-capped Cordon Bleu chicks under Breeding--she used the application tool that comes with leg bands to supply the food, but if you are new to finches, you probably don't have one of these tools.
- fairestfinches
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Hi, Keith!
First let me say that I would be careful about housing societies and spice finches together as they are known to hybridize. I have a close friend who now has 7 society-spice juvies -- they look like societies but are a pretty pied "spice" color.
Second, if you're still finding hatchlings on the bottom of the cage, then there's either something wrong with the hatchlings or the societies are being spooked out of the nest and are accidentally dragging the hatchlings out with them. If possible, I suggest moving the societies and the nest with chicks into a separate cage and seeing if that resolves the problem.
Michele
First let me say that I would be careful about housing societies and spice finches together as they are known to hybridize. I have a close friend who now has 7 society-spice juvies -- they look like societies but are a pretty pied "spice" color.

Second, if you're still finding hatchlings on the bottom of the cage, then there's either something wrong with the hatchlings or the societies are being spooked out of the nest and are accidentally dragging the hatchlings out with them. If possible, I suggest moving the societies and the nest with chicks into a separate cage and seeing if that resolves the problem.

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Fairestfinches
This is funny... We have a link to your website and had seen pics of your avairy and birds before we joined this forum & didn't even realize it was you. When we saw you were from Springfield we got so excited but it is the wrong Springfield, durnit! We are going to Springfield MO today, not IL. Wish you were in MO! We'd be so happy. There are no bird avairies around here, not even a petshop unless we go to Springfield, MO!!!!!! Eventually, when we are not renting we might want to have a small avairy outdoors or in a sunroom... just a nice thought!