Why Should I Give Vitamins
to my birds? I don’t take them— Wrong
Thousands of years ago, when man was a hunter
gatherer we ate whatever was available. We could
move around the land in search of fresh food. In the
good times we prospered but when food was short
many died of starvation. Then we learnt the art of
agriculture.
Tied to our fields,we were forced to store food
from one season to the next. We learnt to ripen
(dry) grain, salt our meat, make cheese and cook
our foods. The preserved food was less nutritious
than fresh food but it ran out less frequently, we
suffered fewer famines and so man became more
successful.
Even these days, with our hi-tech agriculture and
food processing, our food preservation techniques
still mean that much nutrition is lost in the cooking,
freezing, pickling and drying. So the food industry
now compensates for this loss. Just read the side
panel of your cereal packet and you will see that
vitamins and minerals are being added for you.
Similarly, your margarine has vitamins added—most
products do. So you do take many vitamins.
But it doesn't stop there. As livestock farming
becomes more intensive more animals are fed on
grain instead of nutritious grass and other fresh
plant material. So farmers add vitamin and mineral
supplements to their animals' feeds to ensure the
animals are healthy, grow fast and that their meat
or milk is nutritious.
A decade or more ago, birdkeepers scoured the
hedgerows for seeding grasses and other nutritious
green food. Green food is full of vitamins, minerals
and protein. However, to supply all your birds'
vitamin needs this way, fresh grasses would need to
make up 100 per cent of the diet, as in the wild .
Not very practical.
So birdkeepers depend on dry seed with its very poor
vitamin and protein content. This is just like the farm
animals being fed on grain without supplements.
Indeed it is rather like feeding prisoners on plain bread
and water and we don't regard that as morally
acceptable any more.
Vetafarm once received a phone call from a rather
distressed beginner Budgerigar breeder. She had
bought some products from us at a National
Exhibition, but she had been told by the champion
breeders in her local club that her birds needed
nothing more that seed and water. To this meagre
diet she added a little eggfood just twice a week. I
have no doubt these advisers believed that what
they said was true and I’m sure they meant well. In
my experience they were either using supplements
without realising it (most commercial eggfoods have
a small vitamin supplementation) or they were the
type of people who relish the fact that their high-
quality birds are difficult to breed. In five months
our caller had had not produced a single chick from
her eight pairs—Another newcomer to the hobby
lost through avoidable disappointment? Hopefully,
this lady's bad experience was corrected within a
short time.
In case any Parrot breeders among you are feeling
complacent because you give your birds fruit and
vegetables so don't need vitamin supplements,
consider this:
Steve Bourke tripled his chick output when he
added Vetafarm vitamins to his bird's seed, fruit and
vegetable diet. Graham Eden also had a fantastic
breeding season by adding extra supplements to
Parrot Pellets (already supplemented) and fruits.
So in conclusion—you do eat vitamin supplements
and your birds should too. It is very easy to add
Vetafarm's Soluvet vitamins to your birds daily
diet.
ARTICLE BY: DR COLIN DAVIS BVSc JP
VETAFARM
3 Bye Street, Wagga Wagga, NSW 2650
PO Box 5244, Wagga Wagga, NSW 2650
Phone: 02 69256222 International Phone: +61 2 69256222
Fax 02 69 256333 International Fax: +61 2 69256333
Email: vetafarm@vetafarm.com.au
Internet: www.vetafarm.com.au