Chào cả nhà!
Mùa đẻ năm này cũng đã vào mùa được gần hai tháng. Trong khi đó mình đã được 12 con chim con........mỗi năm mình và bạn mình hay gặp truyện không hay. Nào là chim đẻ không có cồ, khi chim con nở thì chim bố-mẹ ném con ra.......vân vân. Ở đây mình có một con chim con mình phải nuôi tay khi em nó được 6 ngày tuổi thì bố-mẹ nó không chịu mớm nữa mà muốn đẻ tiếp. Vì vậy mình phải bắt ra nuôi tay. Nuôi tay thật là tôn công.....tốn sức.....nhưng vì chim con là chim của cặp quí nhất của mình nên đành phải nuôi tay mà thôi.
Đây hình em nó khi em nó được 23 ngày....em nó đã biết tự ăn.
Và đây là cách nuôi chim con từ một ngày tuổi cho tới khi biệt ăn. Khi mình phải nuôi tay. Bài này rất có ích lợi cho ai đó nuôi chim đẻ.........vì khi nuôi chim đẻ mình phải phòng hờ khi truyện không may sẩy ra.
Mình nhơ anh bạn nào đó dich ra tiếng Việt dùm mình nha. Cám ơn bạn trước nha.
Bài này bạn thận của mình là David De Souza đã việt cho nhưng ai đó cần biệt về cách nuôi chim còn bằng tay.
Frequency of feeding
To successfully rear shama chicks, both the food and the frequency of feeding must be correct. By keeping a watch on the droppings, you will know if you are on the right track. The excreta of healthy chicks in the nest will be enclosed in a transparent sac which the parents remove in their beaks from the nest. BTW the squatting of the chicks in the nest is what causes the excreta to be in a sac. As soon as the chicks emerge from the nest and are able to perch, the excreta will stop being in a sac. However, if the chick is then returned to the nest, the excreta will again be enclosed in a sac. I surmise from this that it is the gripping action of the feet on the perch that results in the excreta ceasing to be enclosed in a sac.
Very young chicks will need to be fed every 45 minutes or so. The time is extended daily until, by the time the chicks leave the nest, the feeding is every 1½ hours. If the chicks are fed too frequently, they will not be able to properly digest the food. The consequence is that the chicks start to have diarrhoea. The excreta is black and smelly and is probably undigested protein. As soon as there is any indication of this occurring, it should be realised that the chicks are being fed too often and the intervals between feeds should be substantially lengthened.
The chicks should only be fed when they are clearly hungry. Chicks in the nest will readily beg for food even when they are not particularly hungry and feeding them whenever they open their beaks will result in disaster.
Teaching young chicks to eat on its own.
It might assist novice breeders if I set out my method of teaching the bird to eat on its own. The window for the chick to learn self-feeding is very small. If it does not learn to do so at this time, it may be long before it is able to eat without hand-feeding.
The day after the chick leaves the nest I scatter dry food and dead crickets and
mealworms on the clean floor of the cage or aviary. I don't do so on the first day as the chicks are bewildered when they first leave the nest.
The chicks will naturally be inclined to peck at anything on the floor and in this way they learn to distinguish food from other things. The food is only placed on the floor and no food is offered in a tray at this stage. The chicks continue to be hand-fed at regular intervals. Bear in mind that it is curiosity that causes the chick to peck on things on the floor. If their stomachs are too full, they will not be curious. So also if they are hungry when they will just perch and call for food.
From the 2nd day, I also place a shall tray of water on the floor. Invariably, the chicks will stumble into the water in their wanderings. They will likely learn to drink before they learn to eat on their own. This way, the chicks also learn to bathe.
By the 4th or 5th day, you may see the chicks pecking at the food on the floor. Let them do so for several days, then place a tray with live molted
mealworms on the floor but continue to also place food directly on the floor. The movements of the
mealworms will attract the chicks to take the food from the tray. Once they do so regularly, you can proceed to the next step which is to also place a tray with live fish on the floor. The water should just cover the backs of the fish.
When the chicks are eating well from the tray, the food and the water can be offered in separate cups. Below is a photo of DDS315. At the age of 24 days, he already knows to eat and drink from the cups. He is fed by hand once in the morning and once more in late in the evening to make sure he is full for the night. In between, he may be fed fish or frog occasionally but he is mostly left on his own.
Cảm ơn bạn NDoan!
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