Double Bars & Cold
Posted: 03 Jul 2024, 10:36
Hey all,
One of my aviaries is a mixed aviary of goulds, scarlet chested, stars and canaries. A few days ago I bought a pair of double bars from a bird store and the female died the first night. I live in Melbourne and the temp got down to about 1c. The bird store was nice enough to give me a replacement female, but I found the pair both dead on the aviary floor this morning. The temp dropped to -1c last night.
The aviary is 4mx4m and protected by plastic panels on all but one side that faces east, to catch the sunshine.
I thought double bars were supposed to be a better cold fairing species? I’d understand if they were CBs or PFs… The goulds and other birds are all loving life and doing fine! Do people cage breed double bars? It’s the only explanation I can think of for such consistent losses from the same source… it must be the temperature… The birds were also kept outside at the bird store but were in an enclosed area. Many of the birds that live in the aviary come from the same bird store and were kept in the same conditions.
I’m obviously heartbroken because I feel responsible… I love the species and want to keep them, and this sucks so much… I drove for hours to pick them up and then hours again for the replacement female… any information from people that have experience keeping double bars would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
Dmitri
One of my aviaries is a mixed aviary of goulds, scarlet chested, stars and canaries. A few days ago I bought a pair of double bars from a bird store and the female died the first night. I live in Melbourne and the temp got down to about 1c. The bird store was nice enough to give me a replacement female, but I found the pair both dead on the aviary floor this morning. The temp dropped to -1c last night.
The aviary is 4mx4m and protected by plastic panels on all but one side that faces east, to catch the sunshine.
I thought double bars were supposed to be a better cold fairing species? I’d understand if they were CBs or PFs… The goulds and other birds are all loving life and doing fine! Do people cage breed double bars? It’s the only explanation I can think of for such consistent losses from the same source… it must be the temperature… The birds were also kept outside at the bird store but were in an enclosed area. Many of the birds that live in the aviary come from the same bird store and were kept in the same conditions.
I’m obviously heartbroken because I feel responsible… I love the species and want to keep them, and this sucks so much… I drove for hours to pick them up and then hours again for the replacement female… any information from people that have experience keeping double bars would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
Dmitri