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Blue caps

Posted: 29 Apr 2010, 11:31
by SCARLET
I have seen pics of these on the net. Are they common or uncommon? (expensive or not expensive)? :)
They look really pretty.

Re: Blue caps

Posted: 29 Apr 2010, 18:02
by AMCA26
Expensive and i believe hard to breed. Would like some myself but yeah. I think they need non stop mealworms?

Re: Blue caps

Posted: 29 Apr 2010, 18:04
by Jayburd
they are expensive. $300. per pair :o :shock: :? . They aren't hard to breed, but you need to have termites. LOTS of termites.

I probably wouldn't try these until you have consistently bred their less expensive cousins, the red cheeks.

Hope you get a chance at them sometime, top of my wishlist, hoping for some in september! :)

Re: Blue caps

Posted: 29 Apr 2010, 19:00
by dRAG_jUNKIE
I'm pretty sure i saw them for $200 a pair, up here in QLD

Re: Blue caps

Posted: 29 Apr 2010, 21:55
by SCARLET
Haha, I do have termites in the fence posts! Maybe they are the answer to that problem...

Seriously, expensive and hard to breed does not sound so good.

Re: Blue caps

Posted: 18 Sep 2011, 16:54
by dano_68
Jayburd wrote: ...I probably wouldn't try these until you have consistently bred their less expensive cousins, the red cheeks.
Hi Jay, I often hear people say this, however I think it is a fable. Contrary to popular belief, breeding Red-cheeked Cordons and Blue Caps are 2 very different species. They may look similar but their husbandry is completely different. I actually think a closer analogy would be Pytillias.

Anyways, just my 2 cents....

Re: Blue caps

Posted: 18 Sep 2011, 17:05
by Jayburd
really? that's interesting... though I suppose it makes sense. The same sort of live food and nesting requirements I suppose. I assume it would still be something like red cheeks-auroras/red faced pytilias/blue caps?

Re: Blue caps

Posted: 18 Sep 2011, 17:42
by desertbirds
dano_68 wrote:
Jayburd wrote: ...I probably wouldn't try these until you have consistently bred their less expensive cousins, the red cheeks.
Hi Jay, I often hear people say this, however I think it is a fable. Contrary to popular belief, breeding Red-cheeked Cordons and Blue Caps are 2 very different species. They may look similar but their husbandry is completely different. I actually think a closer analogy would be Pytillias.

Anyways,
just my 2 cents....[/quote


I think thats spot on Dano.

Re: Blue caps

Posted: 20 Sep 2011, 22:57
by Zipman
Lots of live food during breeding season preferably termites although breeders do breed succesfully using other live food and an austerity diet during the non breeding season as cock birds get too fat and are unable fertilize hens not too many fatty seeds and try and get unrelated pairs, the hens are very suscesptible to egg binding in particular during their first season, I stuck to all of the above and still never bred them, they did nest and lay eggs and would sit but eggs always were infertile I suspect the pair I had were too closely related, very beautiful finches and the pair I had lived for years only recently lost the cock that would have been approaching 7-8 years old, want some more.