The OC blog - The Our Cockatiels Blog

Cockatiels make a wonderful hobby and wonderful pets! For those who want to handle their birds often, we suggest hand-tamed Cockatiels. Please research through reading, the internet, and asking questions of pet shop clerks before purchasing a Cockatiel. The more you know and understand about these wonderful birds the better relationship you and your Cockatiel will have with each other. If you click on our photos; you will have a super close-up.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

The Odd couple


The Odd Couple


Besides other Cockatiels, we had 3 regular Grey Adult Male Cockatiels when we started.
For some reason the gray ones are mean to other Cockatiels, especially to each other; other Greys. And they get out of control on hurting each other during mating seasons.

When we first got our birds the Parakeet, Candy, came with them and was in a separate cage. Eventually, we put Candy the parakeet in our largest cage with most of our Cockatiels.

Strangely enough, Candy decided to be closest friends with our meanest gray Cockatiel, Bully-boy, who the other Cockatiels avoid. Candy got so physically close to Bully-boy as to be crowding him. Bully-boy, the Cockatiel, would peck at Candy, the parakeet as if to say "back-off and give me some space" and Candy would back off for a short time and then crowd him again.
Then the whole cycle would start all over again.

Eventually, because of our grey Cockatiels aggressiveness we had to remove the greys from the main cage and put our two remaining greys in seperate cages.
Apparently we got Bully-Boy and the other grey mixed up. We figured this out because Candy would not go near the cockatiel with whom he was sharing a cage. So we took him and put him with the other grey and he, Bully-boy, right away went up to Candy as if he missed him. Bully-boy was no longer annoyed with his new friend. When his little friend was gone and was back it seemed that Bully-boy realized that the annoying parakeet, Candy, was a good friend to be missed after all. Bully-boy no longer acts annoyed by Candy his little friend.


Bully-boy (the Cockatiel) & Candy (the Parakeet)



Since Bully-boy, the Cockatiel and Candy the parakeet get along so well,
we would only sell them together on the condition they are kept together in the same cage. Since Bully-boy does not usually get along with other Cockatiels: it is best that Bully-boy and Candy share a cage with no other birds.
$60 asking price for the two of them together.



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Monday, May 26, 2008

Hand-tamed Cockatiel photos.

We were asking $125 for our hand-tamed Cockatiels.
Now we have gone down to $40 each for our hand-tamed Cockatiels.
Our Albinos are not for sale.


Myself, Bill Mazzulla III and our hand-tamed birds.


Below is close-up of Greyhead.


















During their exercise time our hand-tamed
Cockatiels decided to visit
Candy, the Parakeet and
Bully-boy, another Cockatiel
who are both in the cage they are on top of.



Close-up of Crybaby.
Crybaby got her name
because she is the youngest of her brood and
she was always crying for food and attention.
Even after she being weaned;
Crybaby still cried to be hand-fed.



Snowy Jr.
is an albino like it's father.

Our albinos are NOT for sale.




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Monday, May 19, 2008

The Near Future (Future stock)






We do not guarantee gender because we only know
the gender for sure of those who have mated.

Any cockatiel that mates and is nesting, or is sitting on eggs or has young that are not yet weaned will not be for sale.
Even if listed for sale.

These 4 photos are of 3 more of our birds that have nice color mutations.
2 are Lutino Pied and one is Lutino-Pearl.

All of the birds below have paired off, mated, nested and laid their eggs.
Two chicks hatched in the last few days so they should be weaned and ready for sale in about 8 weeks or so. From that brood more are due soon.
We have 3 other pairs with eggs so including the chicks that just hatched.
Your choices of Cockatiels with color mutations will increase by the time they all hatch and are weaned about 11 weeks or so. (End of July and early August)















Thanks again for visiting us here at:
The OC blog - The Our Cockaktiels Blog


William & Rosemary Mazzulla
For more information and phone number:
PastorBill3rd@JesusAnswers.com

Photos by internet Pastor Bill
If you use any of our photos please in your e-mail, post, blog, or website etc.
provide a link back to our blog since they are our unique photos.
Thank you
.

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Monday, May 5, 2008

Introduction to The OC.

This blog is about Our Cockatiels.
To find out about our Cockatiels available to your loving home scroll further down to our other blog entries.

Our first bird was a yellow parakeet that we named Big Bird.
Then we had another Parakeet.
Then after that we had various kinds of pets.

For the past several years we have had Cockatiels.
Until recently it was usually one or two at a time.

Recently we acquired enough Cockatiels to start breeding.
We had hope at least several pairs will mate but and several pairs have successfully mated and hatched Cockatiel chicks.

From our first clutch of eggs, we have 4 young Cockatiels about 3 months old.
Since the mother (Pearly) abandoned them when they were only a few days old and only the father (Snowy) fed them, eventually we decided to help him by hand-feeding them once in a while, in between his feeding them.
From our most recent successful clutch (Romeo & Juliet's mating) 2 of the chicks hatched, are weaned, eating on their own and are doing well.
Their mother has laid more eggs but the mother and father refuse to sit on them.
Another pair with our encouragement (setting the eggs in thei9r nest-box) has adopted those eggs and since laid more eggs.
At times many of our Cockatiels will be for sale.

We do not ship our Cockatiels due to the extra cost and due to the great risk to the birds.
One breeder charges $149 starting, just for the shipping cost.
Depending where you live and how soon you want your birds, that shipping cost will go higher!
Therefore buyers need to live close enough that you do not mind driving to Auburn Maine where we live. Or if you send a friend with the payment (cash) who lives close enough to pick up the Cockatiel (s) .

Cockatiels make a wonderful hobby and wonderful pets!
For children and those who want to handle their birds often, we suggest hand-tamed Cockatiels. Just when out of the cage for play and/or handling make sure your Cockatiel is safe from other pets like cats and dogs.
No matter how much a bird seems to get along with your dog or cat; when your bird is not safely in it's cage NEVER leave them alone together.
You just never know when the hunting, meat-eating instinct of a dog or cat will take over. Better safe then sorry!
Also, when your bird is out of the cage make sure no doors are open and make sure there are no windows without screens open. It only takes a second of someone going in and out of your house for your bird to escape and fly away. Even trimmed wings can grow out surprisingly quick!

If your Cockatiel is going to be in his/her cage most of the time then the cost of hand-tamed birds might not be a requirement.


(Note: Trimmed wings or not, your Cockatiel should have exercise time of at least one hour per day outside their cage whether it is flying around the house, walking around on the outside top of it's indoor cage, or just perching on your shoulder.
A little freedom and exercise will make your Cockatiel much happier.
This is something we have started to be more conscientious about.
If your bird is not hand-tamed or initially bites as you remove it from the cage then do what I do with our more aggressive birds and wear gloves.)


In the case where your bird is in it's cage most of the time, especially if it is one Cockatiel then make sure that it has one or two bird toys in its cage and that you talk to it often.
Cockatiels are a fairly smart bird and need stimulation as well as companionship to be happy and well-adjusted. Even if you do have 2 or more Cockatiels in the same cage; toys and speaking to them is still good stimulation to prevent boredom.
Preventing boredom is important because a bird can overgroom itself and even pull it's own feathers out as a result of such boredom.
One of their toys should be a grooming toy or a knotted rope with frayed ends because the Cockatiel will try grooming that some instead of over-grooming itself.
This is helpful no matter how many birds you have but especially important if your Cockatiel is alone in it's cage.
If you give most any bird a toy with a mirror; they will think they have a friend in the cage.
This can help with loneliness and boredom.
However, it may also cause the bird to be less attached to you.

Please research through reading, the internet, and asking questions of pet shop clerks before purchasing a Cockatiel. The more you know and understand about these wonderful birds the better relationship you and your Cockatiel will have with each other.

Oh and by the way:
if you click with your mouse on our photos you will see them larger with more details of our Cockatiels.

Sincerely,
William & Rosemary Mazzulla
PastorBill3rd@JesusAnswers.com

PS
For more information read our other blog posts at this site.

Then for even more information;
you can also use the webrings on this blog.


To access the sites in webrings we belong to:

1. Before doing the following please remember to bookmark this blog site!
2. Click under the webring banner where it says
"Here" and
3. Then visit the webrings that are about birds and Cockatiels .
4a. From those webrings you can surf different bird and Cockatiel sites by clicking "prev" or "next" and you are visiting websites

4b. or clicking on the
"ring hub" on the webring banner
to see member listings of sites in that webring
If 4b then
5. choosing which sites to visit from
that particular web ring hub listing.

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