Post
by cindy » Tue Jun 23, 2015 11:25 am
Bonded pairs will feed each other, courtship is the male feeding the hen. Males will often eat and go into the box to feed the young and feed the hen while she is incubating/caring for the young.
The hen will usually not breed until she is in season. Breeders often leave boxes up, the hens will go in when ready to breed. Other breeders remove the boxes and wait for hints the hen is ready to nest.... I take boxes down, my hens will start kicking/scratch seed out of their flat dishes, cups, pulling paper up, kicking seed or scratching at the corners of the tray. The signs are usually very noticeable... then a box for the pair is put up.
You need to rest the hen for a few months and take their lead.
*removing the box and not leaving it up will prevent issues such as if your hen happens to be one that lives for her box.... constant egg laying with out mating. Grasskeets are not like finches and you can hang a box with hopes they will breed and lay eggs but it can take weeks or months before they do anything. Most try to get grasskeets on an schedule, late September early October the boxes go up then they come down by Thanksgiving, rest the birds until Spring avoiding the coldest part of the winter. Boxes then go up late March early April, boxes down by late June, no breeding in the heat of the summer.
I happen to breed indoors and tend to avoid breeding during the chill of the winter months when the house is cooler. Hens can be prone to egg binding. Prior to breeding replenish the hens calcium supply with a powdered calcium in soft foods. I also try to not back to back clutch (double clutch) with some of my pairs, it is very taxing on the males.
Zebra, Gouldians, Java, CBM Shaft tail & Grasskeets
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