Showing posts with label nestling housing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label nestling housing. Show all posts

Saturday, June 28, 2014

First Bath for Baby Blue

Well, it's the day after fledging and Sammy is happily enjoying his outdoor aviary today.  I put him in it early in the afternoon and he seems very content.  His outdoor aviary is 6ft high, 6ft long and 4ft wide..wish I had asked my husband for a little bit bigger one, but it will work fine for Sammy.
Male Eastern Bluebird fledgling age 18-19 days
Sammy, waiting to go outside

Male Eastern Bluebird fledgling 18-19 days old
Sammy age 18-19 days old
He has horizontal and semi-vertical maple branches for perching, a feeding platform, a shallow bath lined with small stones so he can have steady footing, a bluebird nestbox with the side open in case he wants to take shelter, cedar branches for shelter and shade, a potted shrub and a plywood roof and sides in one upper corner for shelter from the elements and shade. The sides and roof of the aviary (other than the plywood corner shelter) are made of fibreglass window screening attached to wood framing.  It was set up on the lawn, about 15 feet from the garden that has the seed feeders in it, so he can get used to seeing the birds around him. My husband, Frank, did a wonderful job building Sammy's new temporary home!

Gaping is still an issue, as he is not doing it very often, but he is opening his beak a little more when I gently rub the side of it. He is still eating well and is a hungry little guy...must be due to all that flying!

I placed his bath on the grass in the aviary and he enjoyed his first bath today. He flew down to it all on his own and had a ball!  He fluttered and dunked himself over and over again, and did some very meticulous preening on one of his perches.


I can't whistle worth beans, so I had my husband whistle and recorded it on my Iphone so I could play it for Sammy to recognize me when I approach him.  I also call "Sammy Sammy Sammy".  Today, he listened intently to the whistle recording when I entered his aviary, and flew to me a couple times when he heard it.

Sammy is 18-19 days old today and as beautiful as ever.

Thursday, June 26, 2014

Cage exploring today

Male Eastern Bluebird nestling 16 to 17 days old
Sammy - male Eastern Bluebird - 16 to 17 days old
More milestones for Sammy today!

Last night, I put him snug inside his container nest into his indoor cage.  This cage is a medium dog crate, with fibreglass window screening securely sewn with yarn around the sides and the top. The fibreglass window screening is so he doesn't break any feathers when he starts flying, which the bars of the cage or wire-mesh window screening could possibly do.

Rescued Eastern Bluebird indoor nestling cage
Sammy's indoor cage with kleenex box nest and perches with cedar branch shelter

Beautiful blue wing feathers

At his 3rd feeding of the morning, I had a bit of a happy shock to find him standing on the edge of his container nest!  More progress toward fledging the "nest"!!

In the early afternoon, when I went to feed him, he had left his nest and either walked/hopped/flew around his cage!  What a startling and wondrous sight to see him out of and away from his nest!  He was about 10 inches from his nest!

Fledging has begun..sort of!

Sammy is now 16 to 17 days old and still refusing to gape, but continues to eat well and willingly once the food is in his mouth.  He does a lot of super-fast "flying in place", stretching, scratching his head and preening his wing and body feathers. You can actually see him get a single feather in his beak and slide his beak along the length of each little feather.
He loves to stand up tall on his feet and stretch his neck out looking proud as punch!
Male Eastern Bluebird nestling standing tall.
Sammy stretching tall and proud!
I had caught him a couple of bright green, inch long caterpillars this morning and he was quite curious watching them, but he didn't make any attempts to grab them.

Male Eastern Bluebird nestling's tail feathers
Sammy's blue tail feathers are about an inch long now and simply stunning!
Before bedtime tonight, he began flapping his wings vigorously and hopped/walked at the same time. He's sooo close to flying now!  Every new thing Sammy does is simply amazing and breath-taking..I feel so proud of him and how far he has come.  I don't think it will be long before baby blue is taking his first flight.
Male Eastern Bluebird Nestling
Sammy - just taking a little rest




Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Feeding, Care, Housing Instructions for Eastern Bluebird Nestling

I thought I would post some of the instructions I was given from the licenced song bird rehabber that I spoke to for taking care of and raising this nestling Eastern Bluebird.  He is 8-9 days old today, judging from pictures and descriptions on the internet from reputable sights.

First off, this baby bluebird will need to be fed at least every half an hour from dawn to dusk..just like his parents would have done.  Once he was over 2 weeks old, I could gradually stretch out the time between feedings to around an hour, again as his parents would do.  Once he was flying, I could stretch it out a little more.

The rehabber gave me a special recipe for making Eastern Bluebird nestling food and I stopped at a pet store to get the ingredients. I debated whether I should share this information, and decided that if even one person used this to feed a nestling rather than feeding an inappropriate diet that could kill or at the very least, malnourish and impede the healthy development of a bird, then I should definitely share it.

Let me say this first though, some of the "recipes" and advice on the internet are absolutely ridiculous:
like feed the babies (or adults) bread soaked in milk or just milk..have you ever seen a bird nurse it's young??  Birds DO NOT produce milk, therefore birds DO NOT drink milk!! Processed meats, which are so full of additives and chemicals, are another definite no-no.  Not all birds eat seeds, so an insect eater, like Sammy, would either not eat them or would not develop properly.  All baby birds need protein and calcium as a major part of their early diet.  Worms also are not a proper food for many nestling, as they may not be able to digest them properly.

So, PLEASE, if you decide to illegally care for an orphaned, healthy-seeming nestling, as I did, PLEASE at the very least provide the proper food by calling a LICENCED SONG BIRD REHABBER.  The best option is to actually get that baby to a licenced song bird rehabber, especially if it seems injured or ill.  I was very fortunate that Sammy survived and stayed healthy and strong..it could have very well ended in tragedy and could have been my fault since I had no prior experience in raising a song bird.  So, do I recommend doing this yourself? No, definitely not..but sometimes there is no other option in order for the bird to have a chance.  And sometimes, like me, your heart rules out over your head and you take the plunge and do your best to save a little life. I am thankful and grateful every day that Sammy did so well in  my care.

Enough said (hopefully), here is the nestling recipe for an Eastern Bluebird:

2 tbsp powdered egg white (or hard-boiled egg white, no yolk)
1 can (360g/13 ounce approx size) moist puppy food (chicken)
2 tbsp freeze-dried blood worms (can be found at fish or pet stores)
1/4 tsp Prime brand avian multiple vitamins (again at pet stores)
1/4 tsp calcium carbonate (or washed, baked, crushed to a fine powder chicken eggshell)
2 ounces cold water
1/3 cup tiny diced grapes or berries.

Mix together and keep it in fridge (good for 2 days) or freeze in ice cube trays, then store in air tight container in freezer and take out as needed.

Food MUST be served room temperature or barely warm, NOT COLD, as cold is hard on their digestive systems. This formula is fed either by a medicine dropper syringe, a blunt tiny instrument like a plastic cuticle pusher or a straw with the end cut out into a little spoon shape and filed smooth, whichever works best for the bird. Do not feed with anything that has sharp, ragged or pointed edges as it can damage the birds mouth. Once self-feeding, this mixture can be made thicker and then frozen and then crumbled and mixed with mealworms.  I froze mine, and thawed on the counter or in the microwave as needed, be careful of hot spots in the formula if using microwave.

The nestling should have gaped when I approached him, but he didn't, so I was advised to try rubbing the feeding utensil very lightly along the side of his beak, very gently tap his beak like it was his parents beak touching him, or to very carefully pry open the side of his soft beak with my fingernail and then place the food at the very back of his mouth at the opening to his throat towards the right side.  At the base of his tongue is a hole leading to his lungs and it was VERY important not to get any food in there or he could asphyxiate.  At first I used a plastic, rounded cuticle pusher then switched to a straw with the bottom end cut away and made smooth, to form a little "spoon" about an inch long, as the syringe I tried pushed out too much food at one time. It was a little messy, and I would gently wipe the sides of his beak and face with a soft, damp cloth. Food left on his feathers could cause sores to develop.

The rehabber recommended I keep him in a little terrarium with a vented lid and I placed his "nest" inside that.  His nest was a little round plastic container, filled with kleenex made into a snug nest,
I kept a breathable towel over the terrarium top and sides, to keep out the light and simulate the darkness of his original nestbox and also to help keep him warm. I kept a small corner of the top uncovered to allow for air circulation.