Post
by vienneparis » Fri May 08, 2015 3:55 am
deshud
I have a male yellow American Singer named Ra that was housed in a cage on his own. He was an enthusiastic singer with a sweet melodious song. On his own, Ra would sing from early morning until sleep time.
Since I loved his songs so much, I had the great idea of breeding Ra to get baby singers. The first female I introduced Ra to was a huge failure. In the divided breeding cage, they seemed to get along fine. Once placed together, however, they bickered constantly with the female either running away from Ra or pecking him. Ra stopped singing. I gave up on that pairing. Once I put Ra back in his own cage, he started singing again.
I still had hopes of breeding Ra, so I put him back in the divided breeding cage with a red factor female, Esmeralda. They had a lovefest going so I removed the divider. The two canaries went on a mating frenzy, and Esmeralda started nest shopping. After rejecting several different nests and nesting materials I offered, Esmeralda finally chose a wicker basket and settled in to lay 2 eggs. She is now sitting on her eggs, so I might get some babies finally.
The downside to placing Ra with a female is that he doesn't sing anymore. In fact, he hasn't sang since being placed with Esmeralda. While I enjoy the chance of getting some baby singers, I do miss Ra's songs terribly. I like to think that he's not singing because he's happy with his domestic arrangement, but who knows . . .
I don't have a definitive answer for you, just my own experience with Ra as an example.
Good luck with Caruso.
Vienne
Bird Lover (zebra, society, cordon bleu, orange-cheeked waxbill, bronzed winged mannikin, goldbreasted waxbill, lady gouldian, red-throated parrot & star finches, canaries, budgies, lovebirds, bourkes parakeets, pheasants & quails)