I do not think the interest in Softbills will dwindle in fact a think the opposite
Currently the interest in Aust. Softbills is very big indeed.
Demand far out weighs supply, different states have different lists of species
that can be kept in captivity.
The interest is most likely their beauty but the challenge of breeding them is the major reason
that so many are now being kept.
Gone are the days that diet was a problem, today virtually everything required is easily available.
The Indian Mynah and cultural relatvism tangent thread
- Brisbane_Finches_333
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Well, with the amount of young birdkeepers these days...
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- arthur
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E Orix wrote: 09 Aug 2019, 13:03 I do not think the interest in Softbills will dwindle in fact a think the opposite
/quote]
Have to agree . .
And as availability of exotic softbills declines the Aussies will come into their own
Why would you pay an exorbitant price for a pair of Pekin Robins/ Magpie Robins (with increasingly limited gene pools), when you can pick up most of our beautiful native softbills for less than 10% of the cost of these exotics . . special as they may be
And . . just as an 'add-on' Queenslanders will soon(?????) be able to legally enjoy most native softbills and join our 'fellow-Australians' just 50 years after aviary regulation was initiated in the Land of the Sugarbush
Airline pilot to passengers during daylight-saving period: "We are now entering Queensland; put your watches back one hour . . and your calendars back 50 years!"![]()
And . . apropos of nothing at all really . . I was highly amused by the 'bureaucracy-speak' earlier on this thread which informs us that an 'egg' becomes defined as an 'animal' at that point half-way through its incubation period . . "Spare Me Days"
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Airline pilot to passengers during daylight-saving period: "We are now entering Queensland; put your watches back one hour . . and your calendars back 50 years!" 
They say similar things about us here in WA (w = wait A = awhile)
But mostly thats the way we like it.
Try the new ideas and stuff on the east and once it's been sorted bring it west. And of course if it is rubbish keep it over there.
LML

They say similar things about us here in WA (w = wait A = awhile)


LML
LML
- Brisbane_Finches_333
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So.. I just made a discovery in that old book from 1974 I found - 'Hill Miners' are different to the feral Indian Mynahs in Australia. Apologies for the blurry photo, my laptop can only take selfies and they come out very rubbish. So I wonder if they were ever in our aviaries...noah.till wrote: 08 Aug 2019, 12:30 There was something on Petlink a while back with people selling 'Indian Hill Miners', but I am pretty sure it was a scam
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Aidan [] Junior Moderator [] Breeder of Native and Foreign Finches
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- noah.till
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That's the ones, I am pretty sure they are used as a "common" songbird in shop windows
I doubt they are in our aviaries, but you never know
I doubt they are in our aviaries, but you never know
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