| Jeannine |
| | 02/11/10 at 12:18 PM | Reply with quote | #106 |
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No bird enjoys being by himself. You can have your son come over and work with you to be able to hold the bird and interract with the bird. Or acquire another female ringneck which would provide company for her, but be sure to keep them in separate cages initially until they become friends. |
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| Ginger in Florida |
| | 02/11/10 at 02:23 PM | Reply with quote | #107 |
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Get her a FEMALE friend!!! Doves, pigeons, all are flock oriented... She needs company of her own kind. Or better yet, find someone who has other doves and give her to them (provided they don't breed birds). |
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| Brenda |
| | 02/13/10 at 02:59 PM | Reply with quote | #108 |
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Sometimes ringnecks get attached to one person. And sometimes they will choose men over women or vise versa. It is very hard to break them out of this once they have made up their minds. The best solution would definitely be getting the bird a mate. Because the only person that can make the bird happy is probably your son. |
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| tuckerpoo39 |
| | 03/08/10 at 10:12 PM | Reply with quote | #109 |
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hi all if its not to much to ask i need a little help here i love all my birds but this is the first time i have had 8 eggs from my irn's-one has been hatching for a little over 29 hrs know and i am worried that it might suffact in the half broke egg what should i do.this is the 2 brood with me.last brood only 4 eggs. lovely family 58 birds here.
very concerned parent/{grandma}
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