I’m thinking about adopting a cockatiel As of right now I’m taking care of a little sparrow unable to fly from a friend of mine It awakened some bird love inside of me, and I did find cockatiels really cute and easy to get

So any advice about them, on a daily basis, what should I know before hand, what not to do, what should I prepare for, etc Would be very appreciated, thanks!

  • CaptainFlintlockFinn
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    1 year ago

    I’m a fairly new tiel owner here’s my take:

    • time: they need a lot of time uncaged. Basically whenever I’m home she’s out and about.

    • food: there are lots of opinions on this. I feed mine about 1.5 tea spoons of pellets, just under a teaspoon of seeds, a couple teaspoons of veg (broccoli, bell peppers, carrots, basically whatever we had for vegetables that’s safe for her I chop a bit extra for the bird). She seems to be doing very well on this.

    • light: we have a full spectrum led light that I turn on during the day. They need the light for…vitamins or something? I’m not 100% but the vet said to do it, lol.

    • toys: my bird isn’t super in to toys so I don’t have many, some birds are right in to them though so you may need a pile you can rotate through.

    • cage: get the biggest one you can afford/fit in your space. Your bird will live in it for 20+ years so buy once cry once. I’d advise not getting the minimum recommended sizes you see online. Get a giant one if you can

    • clipping: lots of debate here too. My take is to not listen to the folks that scream CRUELTY at clipped birds. It may not be ideal to have to clip but if it means your bird is safer then do it. There’s also a way to partially clip so talk to an avian vet about the best options for your situation.

    Those are my thoughts for now. If you like birds tiels seem like an excellent choice. Be prepared to spend $500-700 getting set up. After that it’s a fairly inexpensive ongoing cost (unless you need lots of vet visits)