A
Big Surprise For Owners of Australian Parrots & Budgerigars.
There’s
no such thing as an Australian fruit or vegetable!
Yes,
it’s true Australian birds in the wild never ate fruits and
vegetables because until 1788 there weren’t any!
It
comes as a surprise to many Australian parrot owners to hear
that before white settlement, a mere 200 years ago, there were
no fruits and vegetables in Australia. Everything we white Australians
eat originally came from other continents. But, Australian parrots
had been eating eucalyptus barks, saps and leaves for several
millions of years before white man came to Australia and they
still do! The trees are still here and the birds are still here!
That’s
not to say that our birds won’t eat fruits & vegetables.
They do and some parrots love them. In fact some species are
recognized as pests in Australia because they raid vegetable
gardens and orchards. But did you know that they also raid commercial
eucalyptus plantations too? This is because they need the goodness
that’s contained within those eucalyptus trees. It’s natural
to them because they evolved alongside these trees and their
digestive systems are designed to cope with eucalyptus leaves,
barks and saps.
Here’s
a list of fruits, vegetables & cereals that are
not Australian and were never seen on the entire Australian
continent until after white settlement in the year 1788. The
list is far from complete but we challenge anybody to find a
readily available Australian fruit or vegetable.
Fruits:
Apples
Apricots
Bananas
Blueberries
Cherries
Currants (any)
Fejoas
Grapes
Grapefruit
Jackfruit
Kiwi Fruit
Lychees
Nectarines
Mandarins
Melons
Oranges
Peaches
Plums
Pears
Rambutans
Raspberries
Starfruit
Strawberries
Tomatoes
Vegetables:
Asparagus
Beets
Broccoli
Cabbages
Carrots
Cauliflower
Cucumber
Lettuce
Onions
Parsnip
Potatoes
Radishes
Rutabagas
Spinach
Zucchinis
Cereals:
Corn
Maize
Rice
Rye
Wheat
We don’t advise against giving your parrots any of these foods,
we just thought you’d find it interesting. So...what do you
think Australian parrots and cockatoos have been supplementing
their diets with for all these millions of years? Yes,
you guessed it, Eucalyptus.
So
what’s native to Australia that we eat today? Well’ we’re sorry
to have to admit it but only the Macadamia nut and that was
first cultivated by the Americans in Hawaii in the 1920s.
A
word about bird cage toys:
No
matter
what we do for our pet bird, the inside of the bird cage can
never even come close to a pet bird’s natural environment. No
matter what kind of pet bird you have, in the wild it would
never have seen anything like the kind of bird toy you usually
find in most pet stores these days.
Smooth blocks and balls in unfamiliar geometric shapes made
in carpenters workshops from woods that don't exist in the wild
bird’s natural habitat can’t be ideal for any cage bird. To
top it off they’re then dipped in unnatural (and sometimes toxic)
chemical dyes. How can they be healthy items for inclusion in
a bird cage?
Do your bird a favor. No matter what kind of pet bird you have
- try to get hold of some of the tree branches or leaves it
would normally come across in nature. Just watching your bird
enjoy itself will reward you.
Remember the toy is for your pet bird. Bird cages and bird toys
are not supposed to be there as ornaments for us humans to look
at. If your pet bird is a budgie then try toys made from the
Eucalyptus trees that the wild birds (budgies) live with in
their natural environment. Click
here for natural budgie toys.
Budgerigar
Diet
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Budgies in the wild eat both ripe and unripe seeds.
The reason for the consumption of unripe seeds is that
they carry more assimilable lysine. You
can, in part, duplicate this situation at home with
your pet budgie by giving him/her grass seeds from your
gardens. Wild
budgerigars feed upon grass seeds; mainly on the ripening
seeds of the Australian Spinifex and the Mitchell grass
which they supplement on a daily basis with Eucalyptus
leaves, buds and bark.
They sometimes also feed on a few other plants depending
on where they are. |

Native Budgerigar
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The reason for this is that wild budgies are nomadic and don't always come across the same vegetation every day. Territorial birds diets are fixed by what is available in their territory but the budgie has to adapt and this is part of what
has made it such a popular pet. Anywhere in the world it's possible to find a diet budgies can exist on.
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Native Budgie food
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Being able to exist though, doesn't necessarily mean that the budgie is at its happiest or healthiest. However, as long as you try to stick as closely as possible to what natural budgies consume your pet bird should have a long and happy
life.
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Pre packaged bird seed differs from country to country depending on what's available but here are the ingredients you should be looking for on the package: plain canary seed, oats, milled millets including white millet, pannicum millet,
Japanese millet and French millet. Budgies can also benefit from seeds of the sunflower, safflower, wheat, buckwheat and maize.
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A Budgie smorgasbord - nuts and leaves
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If you
want to mix your own feed a basic mix would consist
of 40 % canary seed, 20 % pannicum millet, 20 % French
millet, and 20 % oats. Pretty simple isn’t it? Don't
forget that your bird also needs dietary fiber in
the form of green stuff and they find lettuce or dandelion
leaves appealing.
However, if you give your budgie a Eucalyptus leaf
or two per day that’s all the green stuff it needs
to get all the trace elements, minerals and amino
acids it requires. Eucalyptus leaves are also the
original budgie medicinal tonic. They act as mite
deterrents. They’re bacteriocidal too and act against
internal (gut) parasites so they keep your pet healthy.
Click here for natural
Eucalyptus leaves.
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Buy our Natural Budgie Products From Sunny Australia Home of the Budgerigar:
FreshPak
(Eucalypt leaves)
TwoPak
(Nut and branch Toys)
FastLok
( Budgie Perches)