Double Bars
- Page0044
- ...............................
- Posts: 1533
- Joined: 28 Dec 2008, 22:13
- Location: Brisbane
- Location: Brisbane
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Well a update on the double bars after having them for 5 weeks one pair are sitting on eggs
Cheers
Greg
Greg
- fincher
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- Posts: 981
- Joined: 17 Nov 2008, 19:09
- Location: Perth, Western Australia
- Location: perth western austalia
think the other pr is sitten 2 but dont want to go in the avairy. and really want that pr to have young as the cock bird is Pied so yeh really want them to breed.how come i always get pied birds and there always the very rare ones
- finchbreeder
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- Location: Midwest of West. Aust. Coast
- Location: Midwest of West.Aust.Coast
Never seen a pied double bar, how about pics.
Don't know that I trust the sexing advice of the U tube lady. She seems to think that the fleshyness of the eye ring has something to do with the sex of the dove, while my experience, having had them continuously for 20 yrs is that the fleshyness is related to age.
The brighter the eye ring the more likely to be male, the duller the eye ring the more likely to be female. The fleshyer the eye ring the older, the less fleshy the eyering the younger. And males tend to be more grey while females tend to be more brown.
I have found that male owls tend to be whiter between the bars and females creamer, but as always. The dullest cock and the brightest female have little to seprate them.
"sigh"
LML

Don't know that I trust the sexing advice of the U tube lady. She seems to think that the fleshyness of the eye ring has something to do with the sex of the dove, while my experience, having had them continuously for 20 yrs is that the fleshyness is related to age.
The brighter the eye ring the more likely to be male, the duller the eye ring the more likely to be female. The fleshyer the eye ring the older, the less fleshy the eyering the younger. And males tend to be more grey while females tend to be more brown.
I have found that male owls tend to be whiter between the bars and females creamer, but as always. The dullest cock and the brightest female have little to seprate them.
"sigh"
LML
LML
- fincher
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- Posts: 981
- Joined: 17 Nov 2008, 19:09
- Location: Perth, Western Australia
- Location: perth western austalia
yeh i do seem to have alot of pieds dont i rather pieds than most of the other mutations nd you can not always predict the amount of the pied the youngsters have and its always a challenge
finchebreeder got a pic but not the best but will post soon
finchebreeder got a pic but not the best but will post soon
My double bars have not breed yet. I have 3 pair (for about 12 months), so hope I have at least 1 true pair. They are in a mixed collection of gouldians, orange breasts and ruddies all of which have breed this year. Would i be better off putting them in an aviary by themselves and do they have a set time of year they like to breed or will they go to nest anytime.
- gomer
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- Joined: 23 Nov 2008, 17:41
- Location: Victoria
- Location: Victoria Australia
If you have six birds together,You have a good chance of having a few prs together.I have six birds together in one avairy.And two are prs as they are nesting.And took a punt on two birds being a pr in another avairy.As they were breed out of the other,and i beleive six birds of the same species is enough in one avairy,which are nesting aswell.
Keeper of Australian Grass Finches
- Poohbear UK
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- Location: Nottingham UK
- Location: Nottingham UK
I had about a dozen in a flight for years and let them get on with it...swopping birds each year with mates to introduce fresh blood.
