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Birdie Bars
Posted by:
Eclectus Forum - CBacon@mtnia.com - May 29, 1997
3
ounces uncooked quick oats
3 ounces
other cereals (Shredded wheat crumbled or Grapenuts)
1 cup evaporated
skim milk
1 cup applesauce
(no sugar added)
1/2 cup
reduced calories margarine, melted
1 cup of
the following mix (unsalted chopped nuts, raisins, dates, dried fruit)
1/4 cup
firmly packed brown sugar
1 tsp cinnamon
1 tsp baking
soda
Preheat
oven to 350 F. In large bowl, combine cereals, add other ingredients and
mix well. Spray 13 x 9 x 2 inch baking pan
with nonstick
spray. Bake for 30 minutes (until tester inserted in center comes out clean).
Remove
from pan and let cool on rack. Cut into 16 bars. Wrap each bar in plastic
and freeze. Break one bar in pieces
appropriate
to bird size! This recipe is good for people too!
Birdie Peanut Butter Balls
Posted by:
Glenda - sweetepie@trellis.net - February 12, 2002
1
jar of no sugar/low salt peanut butter -crunchy peanut butter is good too.
Grapenuts
Cereal or bird's favorite seed
Make
small balls from peanut butter and roll in grapenuts and/or seed. You can
use any kind of cereal, like cheerios, and
crush them
up in pieces but not like dust. My senegal loves this!
Birdie Popcorn Treat
Posted by:
Beakers Best Birdie Recipes - beakers@probe.net - May 8, 1996
1
Tbs melted margarine
1 tsp wheatgrass
powder
6 cups
popped popcorn
1 cup assorted
dried fruit.
Combine
margarine and wheatgrass powder. Drizzle over popcorn, tossing to coat.
Add dried fruit and continue tossing.
Store leftovers
(if any) in airtight container.
Brenda's Treat Sticks
Posted by:
Brenda Dawson - brenda_dawson@lineone.co.uk - July 22, 1998
Untreated
fruit tree twigs (or lollipop sticks)
2 cups
of seeds, nuts, dried fruit and egg biscuit in variable quantities (to
suit your bird's tastes)
egg
honey
Preheat
the twigs/sticks in a warm oven (150 degrees C). Mix dry ingredients together
and bind with the egg. Press the
mixture
onto the twigs/sticks (this bit is very messy, but fun!) Bake in the oven
at 200 degrees C for 20-30 minutes until
toasted.
Brush the honey over the treat sticks and return to the oven for a further
5 minutes. Allow to cool. Serve and watch
your birds
demolish all your hard work with relish!!!
This
can be adapted for anything from finches to large macaws (adjust the size
and type of the dry ingredients accordingly).
They love
them and they last much longer then the ones in the shop. If you want to
give your birds a real challenge, slow
bake the
sticks (at 100 degrees C) for 2 hours. If anything is left after four hours,
please remember to remove (together with
any debris)
when the weather is very warm.
Brie's Hanging Seed Surprise
Posted by:
Brie Renteria - Brie2k@alltel.net - July 5, 2001
You
will need a spoonful of peanut butter, a spoonful of bird seed (any kind),a
string or wire.
Form
the peanut butter into a shape (heart, square, ext.). Sprinkle the seeds
onto it. Put a hole in the middle of the treat for
the string
or wire. Thread the string or wire through the hole and hang in the bird's
cage. Boy! Is he in for a surprise!
Brittany's Bird Treats
Posted by:
Brittany Adkison - tropictango@hotmail.com - August 4, 1999
1
whole lettuce leaf
1 cup of
dry oat meal
1 carrot
(peeled)
1/2 apple
5 blueberries
What
to do: Blend all the ingredients together until they are in a real fine
paste. Then scoop out the paste, set onto a plate (I
suggest
pounding it into a shape such as a circle or heart) and put it into a microwave
for two minutes. After heating the
ingredients
up, let it cool off for two more minutes (it can be very hot and it can
burn the bird).
Buddy Bars
Posted by:
Natalie - draven@draven.cx - March 5, 2000
1
ripe banana
1 1/2 cups
(approx) Cheerios type cereal
1 egg (shell
and all, cleaned)
1/3 cup
chunky applesauce
1/2 cup
crunchy peanut butter
1/3 cup
raisins (optional)
Place
the Cheerios in a ziplock baggie and crush with a rolling pin - ONLY SLIGHTLY
(enough to be broken into small pieces,
not pulverized
into dust!). Mush the banana well in a large bowl and add all the other
ingredients, stirring well. Spoon into a
lightly
greased 8 or 9 inch square pan and bake for about 45 minutes at 300. Allow
to cool and cut into bars, depending on
your bird's
size. Buddy, my conure, LOVES these!
Cockatiel Treats
Posted by:
Debra - November 16, 2001
I
have 4 very picky cockatiels. They will not eat anything but seed but these
bars they will fight over. I hope your birds love
them as
mine do.
1/4
cup each:
- Crushed
dried peas
- Apricots
- Nuts
- Crushed
bananas (Dried or fresh)
3 Tbs Seed
3 Tbs Pellets
1 egg and
shell (best if shell is dried and not damp)
1/4 cup
+ 1 Tbs Applesauce ( I use 100% natural)
3 Tbs crunchy
Peanut butter
Mix
dry ingredients in order. You can add anything else that your bird loves.
It should mix very easy. I crushed everything,
but you
can according to your bird size. Fold in the applesause and peanut butter.
It should end up like a paste.
Cook
in a square pan, (easier to cut later than a circle pan), at 350 F for
30 min. It smells bad when cooking, but the birds
love it.
Hope your feathered family will like these.
Crunchy Treat for a Picky Tiel
Posted by:
Sommer Jones - blancpage@mindspring.com - March 27, 2000
My
cockatiel, Xena is a very picky eater and loves crunchy treats. So I made
up this recipe for her. The amounts are very
approx
as it depends on how many birds you have. I only have one so this made
about 25 or so little cakes.
eggshells
from 2 eggs, pulverized and sterilized in oven
small carrot,
scrubbed well, skin on, grated
1/4 cup
creamy peanut butter
some honey
bird's
fave pellets (I used Kaytee Exact for Cockatiels)
Kaytee
Garden Veggie Treat (pick out sunflower seeds since they don't work well
in recipe)
1 egg yolk,
some egg white (from the eggshells you used)
sesame
seed
Mix
all ingredients together until well blended. Spread on ungreased cookie
sheet about 1/4 inch thick, and form sort of a
squarish
mound of it. Bake in 250 degree oven 45min. Halfway through cooking, score
into small pieces, so you have about
25 or so.
Finish cooking, remove from oven, let cool completely. Remove from cookie
sheet, transfer to plate and break up
into pieces.
Offer your tiel one or two pieces every week. Discard any uneaten portion
from treat dish after a week. I keep
mine on
a plate wrapped in plastic wrap and this treat keeps well for several weeks
in a cool, dry place. Xena enjoys picking
this treat
apart and eating it throughout the day.
Cuttlebone treat!
Posted by:
Darcy - Djgrisier@aol.com - January 3, 1999
Cuttlebone
Jar of
honey (for sub use Peanutbutter)
1 cup seeds
(any kind your bird likes)
Nutty Buddy
seeds OPT
On
a paper plate pour SOME honey, pour the seeds in and mix well. Next put
some of the Nutty Buddy mix in. Spread honey
on the
cuttlebone. Put the seeds on the it.
Now
Freeze the cuttlebone for about half an hour so all of the seeds are stuck.
Set in room temperature until it isn't freezing.
Give it
to your birds, they will love it! You can also chop the seeds in little
pieces for little babies. I hope your bird likes it,
mine does!
Finchie Favorite Seed Sticks
Posted by:
Elizabeth Rackley - dorothyrackley@worldnet.att.net - July 25, 1998
I
invented a recipe my finches love! (Other birds will enjoy these, too!)
You need honey, seeds (any seeds your birds
desire)
and a large mixing bowl.
Mix
honey and seeds together in large mixing bowl. Then, wrap in aluminum foil,
leaving the top uncovered. Now, place in
oven heated
to 225F for about 1 hour. Place in cage an` watch `em go!
Fun bird treat!
Posted by:
tiel owner - snapple466@yahoo.com - October 31, 1998
This
is a really easy to make treat for birds. Cut half a bagel into four pieces.
Take one of the pieces and spread peanut
butter
all over it. Then dip the piece into some bird seed so that it is covered
with them. Then stick on some raisins or
anything
else that is small and healthy for your bird. This is a bit messy, but
your bird will love it!
Green Popcorn
Posted by:
Angie - abstokan@bignet.net - November 8, 1997
Air
Popped popcorn or corny cobbers
Spirulina
or Super Bluegreen Algae
Put
popcorn in a plastic bag and add enough powdered algae to coat popcorn.
Serve as a nutritional snack.
Hanging Treat
Posted by:
Anna Leigh - orangeginger@hotmail.com - January 22, 1998
Take
some peanut butter. Spread it on a pine cone. Roll the pine cone in your
birds food mix. Hang using a twisty tie..then hang from
the bird
cage..! My cockatiel Tess loves it!.
Hawaiian Boiled Peanuts
Posted by:
Steve Cornwall - capssteven@aol.com - January 24, 2002
This
is very easy, cheap, healthy, and your bird will love them. Boil some raw
peanuts in a little soy sauce or salt for about an hour,
remove
from liquid and cool in fridge. Put them in a plastic bag to keep them
wet. You can also drizzle some honey over the shells and
then refrigerate
for a sweet nutty treat. They're also tasty for the human pet too.
Healthy Seed Bells
By: Jude
Vaughan - Supplied by Courtesy Jude Vaughan, Parrot Society of Australia
Inc, PO Box 75 Salisbury Qld Aust 4017 -
July 5,
1997
Materials:
small terracotta
pots
microwave-safe
plastic wrap or plastic oven bag
length
of firm wire (coat-hanger type is fine)
birdseed
of your choice (measure it dry in your chosen pots to gauge amount needed)
two egg
whites per cup of birdseed (or thereabouts)
Method:
Prepare pots by lining them with microwave-safe wrap or oven bag. Bend
the end of the wire that goes into the seed bell into
a closed
loop (so that birds and/or leg rings can't get caught on it when most of
the bell has been eaten).
Beat
egg whites until white and fluffy but still liquid - you're not making
a meringue. Mix beaten egg whites and bird seed in a bowl until
all seed
is coated, then spoon the mix into the prepared pots, patting it down firmly.
Push the uncoiled end of the wire through centre
of mix
in pot then out of the drainage hole until looped end rests flat on top
of mixture, then push loop slightly into mixture.
Place
on an oven shelf set high enough to allow wire to hang free. Cook for approximately
60-90 minutes in a very cool oven or longer
if pots
are larger size. The important thing is not to burn the mixture and slow
cooking is needed to set it firmly.
Cooked
bells will slip easily from pots, peel away the plastic wrap while they're
still warm but don't handle the wire until it has cooled.
Using a
pair of pliers, twist exposed wire end to form a hook for hanging in the
aviary.
Handy
tip - Sometimes if you use large seeds in your mixture, the widest part
of the bell which is exposed during cooking will become
slightly
crumbly. This only happens for a centimetre or two, but if they are to
be given away, and you want a less 'rustic' appearance,
just spoon
the mixture into the pot as usual, but mix another beaten egg white with
seeds for the last few centimetres and cook as
instructed
above. This extra 'adhesive' keeps the top layer very firm.
Hope
this keeps your birds happy, and solves the problem for those members who
don't relish using PVA (although it's not toxic) as a
binder.
I for one would prefer to eat egg white to wood glue!
Home-made Avi-Cakes
Posted by:
Kerri - lonnaward@msn.com - October 15, 1998
Mix
seeds, crushed cheerios, crushed pellets, and honey together in a bowl.
You can also add any fruits or veggies if you want. Put
the mixture
in mini-muffin trays and cook at 225 F for 45 minutes. Let it cool and
give it to your "kids". They love it!
Homemade Bird Treats
Posted by:
Linda Loerzel - linvic@planet.eon.net - March 4, 1999
Mix
2 cups crushed cheerios (or shreddies if you don't have cherrios), 2 cups
crushed pellets, 2 cups assorted seeds (I like to use
colourful
seeds for the bigger birds along with parrot premium). Add 1 1/4 cup honey
and stir until mixture is wet throughout but not
soggy.
Maybe a little more or a little less honey. Corn syrup can also be used
if you run out of honey.
Pour
onto cookie sheet and spread out. Bake 225 for 40 to 45 minutes depending
on where you live. I live 2000 ft above sea level so
baking
time differs. If it is near a holiday you may want to divide into sticks
and place a tongue depresser in the center and later drill a
hole through
the tongue depresser so you can tie to the cage. If using the cookie sheet,
halfway through the baking I take out and
score with
a knife so it is easier to cut when baked. My birds love it.
Honey Creations
Posted by:
Brenna - brennbrenn@excite.com - September 16, 1999
1/2
cup of honey (liquid)
seed or
pellets
popsicle
stick with yarn tied to it
Bring
honey to a boil then get a small mold or cup and fill with seed. Get a
popsicle stick with yarn tied to it and push it down into the
seed or
pellets and hold it there. Then pour the honey into the cup or mold and
let harden
Kromers Kraven Krunch
Posted by:
katie price - picez510@aol.com - January 21, 2002
Bagel
Peanutbutter
Honey
Seeds or
dried fruit
Smear
peanutbutter over the bagel, be sure to cover it all.Then roll the bagel
in your birds favorate seeds or dry fruit. Then lightly
drizzle
honey over it. Put in the oven at 250'F for about five mins or until honey
slightly hardens. Let cool for five to ten mins before
serving.My
macaw loves this tasty treat and eats it faster than I can put it in his
cage.
Papaya Crunch
Posted by:
Jami - September 12, 2001
1
cup dried papaya pieces
1 cup uncooked
oats
2 tbs honey
Place
the above items in the food processor until you have coarse pea-sized crumbs.
Mix enough of your favorite seed mix, dried fruits,
nuts, etc.,
to make it all stick together. Flatten your mixture onto a cookie sheet.
Bake on 200 for 1 1/2 hours. Cut into squares
(serving
size) and loosen from pan. Cool then seal in a ziploc bag.
These
treats get hard and crunchy and my tiels like them MORE than store bought
cruchy treats.
Parakeet
Treat -- used to make your 'keets happy
Posted by:
Katherine Booth - MuseWitch@aol.com - August 17, 1997
4
oz. sunflower seeds (without the shells work best)
1 cup cooked
brown rice
1/2 a tones
container of sesame seeds
2 hard
boiled eggs chopped
4 oz grapes,
quartered.
Mix
all the indgredients together. This makes 4 cups worth of food. I freeze
it in batches of 1 cup. My parakeets love it. Enjoy!
Parrotlet
Edible Car- a tasty source of veggies, fruits, & treats
Posted by:
Rachel - Muldy@execpc.net - April 14, 1998
Ingredients:
two large
carrots
a couple
of raisins
celery
stick cut in half
peanut
butter (chunky or creamy)
toothpicks
Take
one carrot and cut it so it will look like "wheels". Stick the toothpicks
into them for later use. Take the other carrot and spread
the peanut
butter on it. Then rest the celery stick on the peanut butter/carrot. Spread
some more peanut butter on top of the celery
stick and
sprinkle the raisins on it. Last, stick the toothpick wheels on the sides
of the carrot.
*** Supervise
your bird when down to the wheels - just in case
Peanut Butter
Seed Bar
Posted by:
Brenna - crazybaby778@usa.net - June 4, 2000
Peanut
butter
Your birds
favorite seed
Cardboard
paper towel tube or something like it with holes punched in sides
String
Tie
string to carboard tube through the holes, then spread peanut butter all
over the paper tube. Then roll it in the seed and there ya
go!
Quick Treat
Posted by:
Nicky - nicky21au2000@yahoo.com - March 30, 2001
Buddy
loves these treats, he can`t stop eating them lol... All you need is:
~mixed
seeds
~crushed
pellets
~some honey
~a little
parsley or any fruit or veg your bird likes
Pre-heat
oven to 200F or 130C. Mix seeds, crushed pellets, honey (enough to cover
ingrediants) and parsley, or whatever you want to
use, and
when you have finished that, place in mini muffin trays. Place in oven
for about 30 - 45 minutes, but be careful not to burn
them as
they can burn easily. Let them cool and serve to your bird ENJOY!!
Seed
Sticks
Posted by:
David - demerson@ncia.net - May 2, 1998
My
Timneh loves the seed sticks that I make from pancake batter. I dilute
the leftover batter and mix in pulverized sterilized eggshells,
pellets,
and mixed seed. I cook it in a lightly oiled skillet until it is set enough
to handle and then slice into sticks. I bake the sticks in a
warm oven
until they are solid. I'm sure that the mix could be poured into any kind
of mold and baked, skipping the skillet step.
Seed Treats
Posted by:
Tanya - October 22, 2000
I
wanted to teach Willow, my quaker, to do some tricks, so I needed a very
tasty treat to reward her with. All you need is a healthy
seed mix
(no sunflower seeds) and honey. Put the seeds and honey in a pan together.
It depends on how many you want, but for my
one bird
I use 1 cup honey and 2 cups seed and I store them away. Mix the two togeher
well and then shape into little balls. Then put
them in
a container and put them in the refrigerater. Before serving, let stand
at room temperature for a while. Willow loves these and
they make
great rewards.
Sweet
Potato Balls
Posted by:
Georgeann Suthers - suthers@sea.ar.ispnet.com - June 14, 1996
1
large sweet potato, microwaved till soft, 1/2 cup raisins, 1 mashed banana,
1 cup mixed fresh or frozen mixed vegetables, 1 cup
diced apples,
1 1/2 cup uncooked oatmeal, corn flakes or granola cereal.
Mix
all together and add enough fruit or vegetable juice to make it form small
balls. Freeze balls individually. Defrost and serve.
Snackeroos
Posted by:
Purity - September 1, 2000
10
regular cheetos
15 salted
sunflower seeds
A few pinches
of oats
First
cut up cheetos into a reasonable size then add the sunflower seeds, and
oats. ENJOY! P.S. My bird loves this,and its simple!
Tiel & Too
Birdie Cubes
Posted by:
Denise - archambe@uiuc.edu - October 21, 2000
I
have two tiels and a G2 so I came up with this birdie cube recipe. There's
enough big stuff for the too and enough small stuff for the
tiels so
everybirdie's happy. These cubes are a great way to convert a stubborn
bird from seeds to pellets or to trick a bird into eating
its veggies.
2 1/2 cups
fruit juice
3 cups
cockatiel pellets
2 cups
seed mix (the kind with dried fruits, nuts, etc.)
2 cups
parrot pellets
3 1/2 cups
canned fruit in juice
2 1/2 cups
frozen mixed veggies
1 1/2 cups
frozen corn or peas
2 cups
oats
2 1/2 cups
trail mix (natural, no preservatives)
7 1/2 cups
pasta/rice/beans
Depending
on the type of pasta and grain mix you make/buy you may need to presoak
the beans for 24 hours before cooking. Boil the
pasta,
rice and beans until soft. While that is cooking, soak the cockatiel pellets,
parrot pellets, and seed mix in fruit juice (I use the
juice from
the canned fruit... juice NOT syrup). Puree the fruit and veggies (not
the corn/peas) in the blender and add to pellets. When
the pellets
are soft, mix in the frozen whole corn kernels, peas, oats and trail mix.
Drain the pasta/bean mix and stir it in. When
thoroughly
mixed, use a teaspoon to pack mixture into ice cube trays and freeze until
solid. Remove from ice cube trays and store in
freezer
bags. The recipe makes enough for two or three birds for a few months.
To serve, defrost one cube per cockatiel or two cubes
per cockatoo
in microwave for 45-55 seconds or until warm. Yummy!
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