Jump to content
NEW ADDRESS FOR MEMBERS GREYFORUMS.ORG ×
NEW ADDRESS FOR MEMBERS GREYFORUMS.ORG

Baby Grey 10 Weeks


Christina

Recommended Posts

I just bought a 10 week old TAG. He is still on two handfeedings a day. I did handfeed my B&G Macaw but my TAG doesn't seem to bob the same. Do they just have a light bob? I don't want to aspirate, so I'm being cautious. The breeder said to feed 30cc's...does this sound right to those of you that do handfeeding? I'm just double checking. He does seem interested in other foods...I've offered grapes, apples, beets, and pellets among a few. He just picks right now, which is fine. He has only been home a day anyway, I'm sure he is still adjusting to that as well. Just want to double check my measurements and the "bob" factor for this bird. He is much smaller than my B&G...so its a different feel for me. Thanks.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi, & Welcome Christina. I'm glad you joined our family here. I know nothing about hand feeding, but I'm sure others here will help. Looking forward to hearing more. Keep us updated, and we love photo's if you have any to post!:)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Lidia

I have no experience with raising babies, but I am sure the people here who have will chime in.

And welcome to the flock!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Darn, Christina, I have no experience with hand feeding either, seems the only ones to post so far know nothing about it. I am not comfortable with hand feeding so I don't do it, I leave it for the more experienced, but you have fed a bird before so it couldn't be much different. But I am sure one of the ones who do hand feed will chime in soon and give you the answers you desire.

Welcome to our family, looking forward to hearing more about your grey and get us some photos if you can, we love photos if you hadn't already noticed.:P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest Lidia

Christina,

 

I found this fairly comprehensive article that might help you. If it is difficult to read as a quote, I have put a link to the article at the bottom:

 

Handfeeding the Babies: Concerns and Techniques

 

Everything that touches the babies should be disinfected including your hands. I use a laboratory hand cleaner that kills gram negative and gram positive bacteria, fungi, and yeast. Since I use a spoon and a large glass mug for feeding, these items and the metal measuring spoon can be soaked in a very strong disinfectant between feedings. Don't allow anything that goes into the babies' mouths to touch your countertop. Kitchen countertops, dish cloths, sponges, etc. can be seriously contaminated with gram negative and other pathogenic bacteria. Place a paper towel on the countertop and put the spoon or syringe on the towel.

 

Prepare the formula fresh with each feeding – no exceptions. If you are interrupted for longer than 15 minutes, prepare fresh formula. To prepare the formula, measure the water and dry formula powder in a large glass mug. Place the mug in a shallow baking dish and run very hot water into the dish. Some disinfectant solutions may be absorbed by plastic syringes, plastic bowls, or plastic mugs used for formula preparation or handfeeding. Non-porous handfeeding equipment avoids this possibility. OxyFresh and Citricidal are good disinfectants to use for plastics but the soaking solution will have to be changed every other day or so. Feed each clutch separately with freshly prepared formula. Several days' supply of formula can be kept in a container in the 'fridge. The balance of the formula should be frozen and the date noted when the formula went into the freezer.

 

Nutritionally incomplete homemade formulas can cause serious health problems and even death as described in Avian Medicine: Principles & Application. I have had good weight gains and healthy babies using the Kray formula made with Zupreem primate biscuits. The recipe is:

 

1 pound of primate biscuits (ground into powder by blender or food processor).

1 pound of ABBA Green 92 Nestling Food.

2 ounces of dry baby cereal - the mixed grain variety.

1 teaspoon of Spirulina mixed into the dry ingredients.

The following jars of baby food are the 4-ounce jars:

 

1 jar of green beans

2 jars of peas

1 jar of a fruit

1 jar of creamed corn

1 jar of a meat

1 jar of either carrots or squash

Mix baby foods in the blender with 2 cups of water. Measure out 2 rounded cups of the dry mixture. Stir dry and wet mixture; let sit for a few minutes. Spoon the mixture into ice cube trays that have been just run through the dishwasher. Remove and place the cubes in a freezer bag after frozen solid.

 

To serve - Thaw the number of cubes required for a feeding in the microwave; add a small amount of water to slightly thin; and stir down to cool. Check the temperature of the formula with a thermometer before feeding.

 

For syringe feeding, the ABBA Green should be run through the food processor for a smoother formula mix.

 

Use only Zupreem brand in the original packaging for the primate biscuit portion of the recipe. The biscuits, and the dry blend of ingredients in the formula base, should be frozen until used in the recipe.

 

Avian medical literature covers crop burn, crop stasis, splay leg, stunting, aspiration, constricted toe syndrome, pendulous crop, and other problems. A breeder MUST know how to recognize and avoid these conditions. Be diligent in learning about these conditions for the sake of the babies. This level of medical knowledge is the basic information without which a breeder should reconsider his acceptability as a breeder of these precious birds.

 

Support the baby's body and feet in your cupped hands when removing him for feeding. Using too firm a grasp when picking up the baby with the palm across the back and the fingers on the abdomen can cause bruising of the internal organs. The baby will kick and squirm because he doesn't feel safe when he is picked up in the manner described above.

 

Loosely make a circle of your thumb and middle finger to support the baby under the jaws as he eats. Cup your palm over the baby's shoulders during feeding for additional warmth if he is unfeathered. A heat lamp at a SAFE distance can also be used for warmth. A cloth padded container makes a safe and comfortable place for the baby during feeding. The babies can dig their dagger-point toenails into the cloth diaper – paper towels are too slippery.

 

After you finish feeding, wipe the beak clean with a very warm damp paper towel. If the baby resists the beak wiping, lean in close and softly reassure him. Carefully wipe first one side of the beak, then the other and then the bottom beak. One should never touch or hold the beak of a feeding baby or put any pressure on the beak when wiping it clean. The babies' beaks can suffer compression deformities or lateral deviation of the beak when pressure is exerted on it feeding after feeding, day after day.

 

When you return the baby to the brooder, cup him in your hands, his backside toward you so that there is no pressure on his full crop. Allow the baby to fully position himself in his "nest" before you remove your hands. This extra carefulness will pay dividends at a much later time - the babies will feel safe and secure with humans. This is one of the early first steps toward a self-confident and trusting Grey.

 

Socializing for Bold Babies Begins at Once

 

Hang brightly colored moving toys in the babies' brooder so they will come to realize that color and movement is safe. When they are old enough to nibble at the weaning foods, put some small toys on the floor of the brooder - plastic cat toys are small enough for the babies to move around and try to kill. Relocate the brooder at least twice so the babies are accustomed to change from the earliest weeks of life.

 

Multiple babies can be housed in at least two and sometimes three different cages in different locations with different toys. The different cages, locations, and toys accustom the babies to change and variety. As a consequence, when a baby goes to his new home - it's "Oh, well….. another new cage." The baby who is accustomed to change won't miss a beat digging into his food dishes in his new cage. I had one new owner thank me for selling him a "bird butt". He said that was all he saw of his bird for the first two weeks. He brought her back to be weighed and she had gained 30 grams in two weeks.

 

The babies may not recognize you in different colored clothing or with a new hair cut or style or they are startled because baby birds startle easily. Begin from the first day making a soft clucking sound. They may not know it's you but they come to recognize the sound. This clucking noise is one of the first sounds the babies make - they have heard it so frequently and it is associated with pleasant things happening. A startled clutch of Grey babies are growling gray puff balls.

 

Monitoring Babies' Weights – The Essential Measure of Health

 

Weigh the babies each morning on an empty crop. While weight charts offer a very general guideline, differences in formula and handfeeding technique as well as other variables, can combine to give the handfeeder a false sense of security.

 

A more accurate way to gauge the progress of the baby is to use the percentage of body weight gained in a 24 hour period - from morning to morning. Subtract the weight on the morning of the previous day from the weight on the morning of the current day.

 

To determine the percentage, the 24 hour gain is divided by the weight on the morning of the previous day and multiplied by 100. For example: if the baby weighed 13.58 grams on Monday morning and weighed 16.18 on Tuesday morning, he gained 2.6 grams during the 24 hour period from Monday morning to Tuesday morning. Divide the gain of 2.6 grams by 13.58 and multiply by 100. The percent of body weight gain is rounded to 19%. Young babies should gain a much greater percentage than older babies – typically 15%-25%.

 

A more typical daily gain pattern: a Grey baby weighed 146.1 on Monday morning and 163.4 grams on Tuesday morning; the 24 hour gain is 17.3 grams. The gain of 17.3 grams is divided by the 146.1 weight, and multiplied by 100. This calculates out rounded to 11.8%.

 

Whether a gain is good or inadequate depends on the weight and the age of the baby. A five gram gain on a 25 gram baby is 20% while a five gram gain on a 100 gram baby is only 5%. Using the percent of body weight gained method will give the handfeeder a much better picture of how the baby is gaining. You may find that you often get a good percentage on an older baby (12%-15%) on one day and a smaller percentage (8%-10%) the following day. It appears that the "off" day is a resting period for the body. As the babies get older, the percentages may drop to a range of 3%-7%. The baby should gain weight every day until he begins refusing formula and weaning weight losses begin. Handfeeders and babies are individuals and weight gains will vary. The active baby, the cold baby, the hot baby, the sick baby, the dehydrated baby, the poor eater, the regurgitating baby will gain less well than the one who just eats, sleeps and poops in comfort.

 

The quality of baby formula is related to weight gain, therefore it is very important to buy the freshest commercial formula possible. If the formula is old or has been stored improperly a baby's health can be seriously compromised, he can fail to thrive or gain adequately. Always check for an expiration date or the date of manufacture and buy the freshest formula. Some companies use the Julian code to date their products. The first three digits are the day of the year, the fourth digit indicates the year. For example: 0039 means the formula was manufactured on January 3, 1999. Sometimes a letter will be added (0039K) but it is meaningless as far as date of manufacture is concerned.

 

You can read more at:

http://www.birdsnways.com/wisdom/ww34eiii.htm<br><br>Post edited by: Lidia, at: 2007/07/24 15:39

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi ya, welcome. I have just finished hand feeding my baby (he still eats a little formula but not much) I was feeding him 30-40 ml per time. He really only started doing some serious head bobbing in the last week or so when he actually was not that interested in the baby food. Figure that out!!! Since he is now almost done the baby thing 90% he does enjoy having his seeds soaked overnight so that they are good and soft. I also gave him real baby food fruit and veg loved it. Good Luck...

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks to everyone for their replies. I took him to the vet this morning for a well check up and all is good. She suggested weaning pellets be added at this time and also said his bobbing would be mild compared to the macaw. He did bob more this morning and ate very well. He also ate from his bowl this morning. So, he seems to be coming along.

Thanks again.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

Our baby is 11 weeks and he is still hand feeding 1-2 times per day. Usually in the morning we give him a blend of fruits, nuts and pellets ground up in the food processor. At night we give him just the formula. He doesn't really do the bobbing thing, he chirps. He starts doing this really cute squealing thing when he wants food. In fact I will bring him in the kitchen when I am preparing his food and he practically falls over himself to get to the syringe. He eats around 40ml per feeding. He is very interested in the dry pellets although it looks like he is just grinding them up and not really eating much. He isn't interested in veggies at all yet, but will munch on a little bit on fruit.

 

Good luck!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 year later...

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...