I've had a budgie all of my life. My grandmother gave me a budgie when I was five years old and I've never gone more than a few days "between budgies" ever since. I only have one at a time, I've never tried to breed them because what would I do with a whole lot of budgies, and I usually try to get a male since they are more sociable (more aggressive) and sing better than females.
With all of that for an intro, my budgie died last week. He was fourteen years old and yes, it was a terrible experience.
Pretty much any time I've ever walked into a pet store there's a bin-o-budgies somewhere in there with a few dozen birds in it. So we went to "the city" today with every confidence that we could walk into a pet store, get a new budgie and bring him home in short order.
To my surprise, there's a shortage of budgies. Who knew? After much phoning around, in the whole city there were only two budgies available for sale. A young female and a smaller male. Everywhere else we asked we got told, "Yeah, there's no budgies. Haven't had any for some time, probably won't have any for a while, no idea why."
So we went to look at the only two that were available and fortunately they turned out to be what we were looking for in terms of age and attitude, so I said we'll take the little male.
At that point the seller pulled out a four page exam on how to care for budgies and I had to complete that before he would sell me the bird.
List at least four household items that are toxic to budgies. Name four signs that a budgie is sick. Why should perches be different shapes. Where do you plan to place the bird in your home and how many hours per day will he be left alone? Do you have kids and if so how will you protect the bird from the kids. And so on, for four pages.
I've been looking after a budgie my entire life so the exam wasn't really difficult to complete but I guess if you can't pass the exam there's no bird for you.
I was really surprised that the seller would want a buyer to write an exam before selling the bird, but now that I've had time to think about it I think it's a good idea. You don't want to sell one of those little characters to someone who knows nothing about them or think it's a kid's toy so that's a good way to be sure you're sending the bird to a good home.
Anyway, meet Sid:
sid-20230517.jpg
With all of that for an intro, my budgie died last week. He was fourteen years old and yes, it was a terrible experience.
Pretty much any time I've ever walked into a pet store there's a bin-o-budgies somewhere in there with a few dozen birds in it. So we went to "the city" today with every confidence that we could walk into a pet store, get a new budgie and bring him home in short order.
To my surprise, there's a shortage of budgies. Who knew? After much phoning around, in the whole city there were only two budgies available for sale. A young female and a smaller male. Everywhere else we asked we got told, "Yeah, there's no budgies. Haven't had any for some time, probably won't have any for a while, no idea why."
So we went to look at the only two that were available and fortunately they turned out to be what we were looking for in terms of age and attitude, so I said we'll take the little male.
At that point the seller pulled out a four page exam on how to care for budgies and I had to complete that before he would sell me the bird.
List at least four household items that are toxic to budgies. Name four signs that a budgie is sick. Why should perches be different shapes. Where do you plan to place the bird in your home and how many hours per day will he be left alone? Do you have kids and if so how will you protect the bird from the kids. And so on, for four pages.
I've been looking after a budgie my entire life so the exam wasn't really difficult to complete but I guess if you can't pass the exam there's no bird for you.
I was really surprised that the seller would want a buyer to write an exam before selling the bird, but now that I've had time to think about it I think it's a good idea. You don't want to sell one of those little characters to someone who knows nothing about them or think it's a kid's toy so that's a good way to be sure you're sending the bird to a good home.
Anyway, meet Sid:
sid-20230517.jpg
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