Green Cheeked Conures are good natured little chippers. Tend to be quieter than some of the more brash but handsome Aratinga conures. Pyrrhura conures tend to be a little smaller and generally quieter, though their chip chip voice can still be raucous at times. Don't really need any special food and you should easily be able to pick up a Green Cheek for $300. A Maroon Belly goes for $100-$200 here, so I'm sure they'd be cheaper in Singapore. Make sure she gets one that's been handraised. Can easily tell if they have or haven't as a handraised one will be interested in people moreso than scared.She's looking at max $300 for a smallish bird, excluding cages and accessories. Talking isn't necessary.
We're thinking of going down to look at some Conures at a few different breeders. Either Green Cheeked or Yellow Sided. Thoughts?
Breeder seemed ok with selling us an unweaned bird (5-6weeks old), we told him we'd think about it. So far from all the reading I've done it appears that it's a bad idea and that the breeder is a dick for offering to sell it to someone inexperienced, so it looks like a no go. Will search a bit more this weekend, thanks for all the helpGreen Cheeked Conures are good natured little chippers. Tend to be quieter than some of the more brash but handsome Aratinga conures. Pyrrhura conures tend to be a little smaller and generally quieter, though their chip chip voice can still be raucous at times. Don't really need any special food and you should easily be able to pick up a Green Cheek for $300. A Maroon Belly goes for $100-$200 here, so I'm sure they'd be cheaper in Singapore. Make sure she gets one that's been handraised. Can easily tell if they have or haven't as a handraised one will be interested in people moreso than scared.
Definitely a bad idea and an even worse idea for a novice. I wouldn't touch a bird which hadn't been weaned - so easy to do them damage or not feed them enough. It's good to have them whilst they're still young as then they'll imprint on you. However, if you want the bird to get on well with more than one person, then your mum will need to make sure that other people handle the bird and feed it otherwise it will imprint on your mum and defend its territory against anyone else (not guaranteed, but this is a common issue).Breeder seemed ok with selling us an unweaned bird (5-6weeks old), we told him we'd think about it. So far from all the reading I've done it appears that it's a bad idea and that the breeder is a dick for offering to sell it to someone inexperienced, so it looks like a no go. Will search a bit more this weekend, thanks for all the help
Got a weaned 3 month old GCC today. Breeder was a nice guy, showed us that he* was eating solids properly and showed us how he rejected the baby formula. He's left the decision to clip the wings to us, I'm not sure whether we should or not. On one hand it doesn't seem right, but on the other it's hard to take him out often and give him more attention if he keeps flying around. As of now if there are two people in the room he just flies from one head to the next. Any tips on how to get him to land on the shoulder instead?Definitely a bad idea and an even worse idea for a novice. I wouldn't touch a bird which hadn't been weaned - so easy to do them damage or not feed them enough. It's good to have them whilst they're still young as then they'll imprint on you. However, if you want the bird to get on well with more than one person, then your mum will need to make sure that other people handle the bird and feed it otherwise it will imprint on your mum and defend its territory against anyone else (not guaranteed, but this is a common issue).
Got a weaned 3 month old GCC today. Breeder was a nice guy, showed us that he* was eating solids properly and showed us how he rejected the baby formula. He's left the decision to clip the wings to us, I'm not sure whether we should or not. On one hand it doesn't seem right, but on the other it's hard to take him out often and give him more attention if he keeps flying around. As of now if there are two people in the room he just flies from one head to the next. Any tips on how to get him to land on the shoulder instead?
*have no idea of his/her gender tbh
Ah, goes some way to explaining why whenever my neighbours' cat comes in he immediately heads for a tea-towel to sit onwhy-cant-cats-resist-thinking-inside-the-box
Just for those that want the pretty picture.... (not my cat!!)
I used to think this way, but when our new neighbours' moved in they brought with them 2 lovely cats who seem to also attract all the other nice cats who live nearby and now I love them.Cats are ****ing terrible. Kittens are gun but **** cats.