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How to Take Care of a Newborn Baby Parakeet

A baby parakeet should only be handled with clean, washed hands.
A baby parakeet should only be handled with clean, washed hands.

When caring for a baby parakeet, the parents will do most of the work. Still, it's important to prepare by providing a nest box, bedding, and plenty of food for the breeding pair of adult parakeets. Parakeet owners can check periodically to make sure the parents are caring for the baby parakeet and that it is developing normally.

A nest box can be purchased at pet stores and bird supply stores. Many of these can be found online. The nest box ideally should be mounted outside the cage for free-roaming parakeets. If the birds are not free-roaming, the box can be mounted on the outside of the cage with cage wires cut so budgies can access the nesting box without leaving the cage.

Baby parrots require a suitable cage, proper feeding and a quiet place.
Baby parrots require a suitable cage, proper feeding and a quiet place.

Parakeets should have access to bedding material, like pine chips, to build their nest. Proper amounts of bedding will prevent a baby parakeet from developing splayed legs. A wooden insert with a concave bottom for the nest box will also help prevent this problem.

Like the cage, the nest box should have adequate amounts of light during the day and should be covered at night. Adult parakeets will be hungry while caring for a baby parakeet. It's important to provide them with extra food and fresh water during this time. Bird seed, vegetables, and fruit can be offered, but must be organic.

Many budgerigars, or parakeets, have distinctive black and white stripes on the back of the neck and wings.
Many budgerigars, or parakeets, have distinctive black and white stripes on the back of the neck and wings.

For the first few weeks of the baby parakeet's life, the mother will do most of the care, providing warmth from her body and feeding the chick pre-chewed food. After hatching, chicks will be completely helpless and blind. The chick will develop quickly and stay with the mother in the nest for three to six weeks.

The nest box should be checked periodically for debris and dead chicks. If a chick dies, it should be removed immediately to prevent disease. Living chicks can be checked for splayed legs. If this developmental problem happens, it can be corrected if caught early because the chick's bones are still developing.

Breeders can inform new owners on how to feed and care for their baby parrots.
Breeders can inform new owners on how to feed and care for their baby parrots.

A baby parakeet may be handled with clean, washed hands, but it should be touched as little as possible. If the adults reject the baby parakeet, it may be hand-fed using a syringe and commercially prepared parakeet chick food. Younger baby parakeets may be fed five times a day, while older ones need to be fed only twice a day.

After several weeks, the parents will stop feeding the chick and leave the nest. They will attempt to call the babies out of the nest. If the budgie chicks do not leave within about two days, they are at risk of starving to death. They may be gently removed at this point and should begin to behave much like adult parakeets.

How to Take Care of a Newborn Baby Parakeet

Source: https://www.allthingsnature.org/how-do-i-care-for-a-baby-parakeet.htm

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