Budgie Sounds | Parakeet Sounds

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  • čas přidán 22. 01. 2017
  • Hi, My name is Cookie and yes, I dont have my female partner :( Sorry, Now is too late to get one, because I love my mirror. Anywhere I see my reflection I like to chirping, singing and talking to! This time it is an old broken Samsung smartphone LCD :/
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    We are here bringing you all you need to know when it comes to proper Budgie or Parakeet care! The budgerigar is a surprisingly interesting and complex creature with an interesting history. Anyone willing to learn about these little birds and their care should be able to bring one home and have several years of companionship with their new pet. We are dedicated to showing the world the joys of keeping healthy Budgies or Parakeets.
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Komentáře • 67

  • @elisemetzger2849
    @elisemetzger2849 Před 6 lety +39

    0:38 when he starts bobbing his head like crazy 😍😂

  • @berniedarbyshire8482
    @berniedarbyshire8482 Před 7 lety +19

    my budgie loves listening to these videos .

    • @carolwade3094
      @carolwade3094 Před 6 lety +3

      It's only wanting to be with its flock, which it will never have, as you've helped another trafficker sell another bird, which belongs in the wild. It has wings. Did you notice that?

  • @shantikaikulani4370
    @shantikaikulani4370 Před rokem +1

    If your birdies get loud let them listen to Cookie. They will calm right down. Mine do😅

  • @shellyparent4432
    @shellyparent4432 Před 7 lety +40

    Your budgie comes to my house at least two times a week, and Elvis and him sing together ! Elvis gets so happy when he's buddy comes over to chat. 🤣🐦 Thanks

  • @lisasigrist
    @lisasigrist Před 3 lety +1

    Anyone notice the lipstick kiss prints on his head ....lol. Cute.

  • @NikoMidi
    @NikoMidi Před 7 lety +44

    0:36 he bounces fast

  • @victoriapschen
    @victoriapschen Před 7 lety +2

    Im letting my mothers budgies listen to this. Her budgies make very loud obnoxious barking sounds and dont sing much. They enjoy listening to this and hopefully they will learn to sing nicely.

  • @vickigrant365
    @vickigrant365 Před 6 lety +3

    I love Cookie so much. I listen to him and watch him every day. Pretty bird!!!

  • @jjohnson71958
    @jjohnson71958 Před 5 lety +1

    Their minds become so easily stimulated by a mirrored reflection of themselves

  • @conniefrancis8080
    @conniefrancis8080 Před 2 lety

    Love your baby sure helps my birdie relax sing play Frack is alone his buddy passed this is great he's coming to me wonderful thank you

  • @paigenienstedt5772
    @paigenienstedt5772 Před 7 lety +3

    Love how he bangs his head on the mirror

  • @ryanmaust7579
    @ryanmaust7579 Před 7 lety +9

    I love this little guy! So do my parakeets.

  • @dexdragons5164
    @dexdragons5164 Před 7 lety +3

    Cute, i'm getting some budgies in a few weeks

  • @looneybird37
    @looneybird37 Před 7 lety +10

    makes my day every day, such sweet sounds.

  • @andjela7052
    @andjela7052 Před 7 lety +1

    Presladak je i smešan ^_^ ❤

  • @isiahmckane32
    @isiahmckane32 Před 2 lety

    My male and female bugges love this

  • @user-zp4fw6vd6y
    @user-zp4fw6vd6y Před 2 lety +1

    Rich people - instead of a mirror, the pet has a phone screen ...

  • @dominguezlupe
    @dominguezlupe Před 5 lety

    Polly my bird parakeet loves when cookie is singing

  • @phoneguy2005
    @phoneguy2005 Před 7 lety +15

    That is not a mirror, that's a phone screen riped from a phone

  • @sheridynh4944
    @sheridynh4944 Před 6 lety +2

    I recently got two budgies, Green Bean and Maverick, and because I thought they might have been "homesick" I started playing your budgies noises, and now they talk a lot! 😊💗

  • @RedTailedfox551
    @RedTailedfox551 Před 6 lety

    That headband tho 😂👍👍👍

  • @kwantapoempipt412
    @kwantapoempipt412 Před 6 lety +1

    🐦🐦🐦..สวย..ชอบค่ะ..😊😉😙🙏🙏🙏

  • @tumbleweedweed3691
    @tumbleweedweed3691 Před 7 dny

    Cookie ❤❤❤❤

  • @sudhanshukumarsarangi9034
    @sudhanshukumarsarangi9034 Před 7 měsíci +1

    This is my favourite and very so much for 🐦 cute cute cute cute good news ki ki kisi ki kuk kuk kichu kichu 🐦 iee iee michi michi uuu

  • @user-bu6mr9pn7r
    @user-bu6mr9pn7r Před 3 lety

    So cuteee!!!!!!!! 🥴❤

  • @BLUELlFE
    @BLUELlFE Před 7 lety +2

    every day when i see this bird i become happy

    • @carolwade3094
      @carolwade3094 Před 6 lety +2

      It's all about YOU, isn't it? It's all about YOUR entertainment, and not about the bird that was trapped and put in a cage for life.

  • @sassieskier
    @sassieskier Před 7 lety +3

    I literally watched this for a whole hour XD i id i swear

  • @Ghost-xe4dt
    @Ghost-xe4dt Před 6 lety

    Cokie is so cute

  • @moorek1967
    @moorek1967 Před 6 lety

    Today my budgie managed to sit on my finger longer than 2 minutes. And that is after this bad morning. His friend died a little more than a week ago and he seems to be sad during the early part of the day.
    But he is excited right now and climbed up to the highest part of the cage like he was going to fly to me.

  • @peterdel3307
    @peterdel3307 Před 7 lety +3

    nice video and nice bird

  • @paigenienstedt5772
    @paigenienstedt5772 Před 7 lety +5

    I'm getting my parakeets in a week. 2 of em on green (Pickels) and on like cookie (Sky)

    • @TheL08
      @TheL08 Před 4 lety

      Paige Nienstedt ya named him pickles if I don’t know a more adorable name

  • @dzananmusic1299
    @dzananmusic1299 Před 7 lety +1

    treba mi pomoc imam dvije tigrice i boje me se mnogo

  • @user-jl4zv1ii1r
    @user-jl4zv1ii1r Před 7 lety +4

    Mine doesn't care about the mirror at all. WHY?

    • @carolwade3094
      @carolwade3094 Před 6 lety +1

      There is no such animal as a “cage bird.” All caged birds were either captured or bred in captivity. In the wild, these beautiful beings are never alone. If they become separated from their flockmates for even a moment, they call wildly to them. They preen each other, fly together, play, and share egg-incubation duties. Many bird species mate for life and share parenting tasks. The evidence of their close companionship and concern for one another is plain to see.
      Unfortunately for birds, the very qualities that we find admirable and fascinating about them-their brilliant colors, speech capabilities, intelligence, playfulness, and loyalty-have made them the third most popular type of animal companion in the U.S. It’s estimated that 40 million birds in the U.S. are kept caged and often improperly cared for-bored, lonely, and a long way from their natural homes.
      Many people buy birds on impulse and don’t have a clue how much time, money, and energy is needed to care for them on a daily basis. Birds are as messy and destructive as puppies-something irresponsible breeders and retailers often won’t explain to customers.
      And unlike puppies, birds continue this behavior for 15 to 75 years. Additionally, birds can be extremely loud and demanding and sometimes severely bite their caretakers. Because most customers aren’t prepared for an animal companion who is as curious, needy, and demanding as a 2-year-old child, countless birds spend their entire lives trapped inside a cage that’s too small in the corner of a living room, basement, or garage, unable to use or stretch their wings and deprived of the vital companionship of other birds.
      Like dogs on chains, caged birds crave freedom and companionship, not the cruel reality of forced solitary confinement for the rest of their very long lives.
      Driven mad from boredom and loneliness, caged birds often become aggressive, neurotic, and self-destructive. They pull out their own feathers, mutilate their skin, incessantly bob their heads and regurgitate, pace back and forth, peck over and over again at cage bars, and shake or even collapse from anxiety. Even if a previously caged bird comes into a home in which he or she is allowed a rich, active life, this behavior persists and is extremely difficult to extinguish.
      The Truth About Bird Suppliers
      Just as there are puppy mills, there are now enormous bird factories where breeders warehouse thousands of parrots and other exotic birds and remove their offspring in order to sell them to pet stores. These birds are frequently confined to dirty, dimly lit cages, where they are unable to fully stretch their wings. There is no federal legislation to protect birds in the pet trade, and successful prosecution of cruel or negligent bird breeders is unlikely under most state anti-cruelty laws.
      A parrot-breeding operation in Washington state-which a veterinarian described as a “concentration camp” and where, according to news sources, birds “lived in cold, wet, filthy conditions for years”-remains open and continues to raise birds for the pet trade. The same lack of caring has been reported at breeding facilities across the country.
      Disease Is Widespread
      Bird-breeding factories often breed communicable diseases, too, from proventricular dilatation disease (PDD)-the symptoms of which include depression, weight loss, and constant or intermittent regurgitation-to papillomavirus infection, salmonellosis, giardiasis, and psittacine beak and feather disease. Sick birds can give humans or other pet birds chlamydiosis (psittacosis), salmonellosis, E. coli infections, tuberculosis, giardiasis, and other illnesses associated with bacteria and fungi.
      Smuggling Is Common
      Wild-caught parrots are also prime commodities in the multibillion-dollar illegal wildlife trade. Hardly a week goes by without another story of a bird smuggler who was caught with parrots in the air vents of his or her car, of small parrots being smuggled in jacket pockets, or of any of hundreds of other usually deadly schemes to import these valuable birds illegally. While many smugglers are caught, most are not, so thousands of uninspected-and frequently sick and terrified-birds enter the companion bird trade each year.
      When the Novelty Wears Off
      When the birds who seemed so cute and lovable in pet stores turn out to be noisy, messy, and demanding of people’s attention, many are later abandoned, and few live out their natural life spans. About 85 percent of parrots are resold, given away, or abandoned within two years of being purchased. If they are ignored, they suffer in isolation and may become even noisier, more aggressive, or more despondent.
      Caged companion birds are typically not native to the areas where they reside. They cannot be released simply by opening a window and letting them fly away (which would be considered a crime of abandonment in most states). Without the proper climate, food sources, and habitat, escaped or released captive birds become prey for free-roaming cats and wildlife or are doomed to suffer lingering deaths because of exposure, starvation, or injuries.
      Responsible rescue groups, animal shelters, and sanctuaries can only place or care for a small percentage of these unwanted birds. To complicate matters further, some alleged “sanctuaries” are actually thinly disguised breeding colonies or hoarding situations in which birds are housed in extremely crowded conditions, receive minimal care and attention, and may even be sold back into the pet trade.
      If you or a friend have a lot of time and resources and remain determined to have a bird companion, please adopt a homeless one from a shelter or rescue group, but only after fully researching their dietary, behavioral, and other needs. You are in for a great deal of work!
      Buying birds from pet shops contributes to a horrible cycle of disease and abuse, so to appreciate birds without buying and caging them, consider creating your own backyard sanctuary.

    • @lisamcallister6534
      @lisamcallister6534 Před 3 lety

      Because he's bonded to you. You are his flock leader. Birds have a hierarchical society and there is one leader.

  • @dzananmusic1299
    @dzananmusic1299 Před 7 lety

    kako da se naviknu na ruku i mene

  • @Doomslayer2163
    @Doomslayer2163 Před rokem

    Hi my love ❤️

  • @samiashaik6512
    @samiashaik6512 Před 3 lety

    When I am showing my budgies the mirror they r flying away

  • @neelubird
    @neelubird Před 7 lety

    Eid mubarak Cookie gorgeous mwah!

  • @nekigamer9439
    @nekigamer9439 Před 7 lety +1

    moj papagaj je pobegao pre neki dan iz kaveza mislili smo da ce negde da se udari i povredi ali ustvari je letela i stajala gde je stigla

  • @shauntahall2233
    @shauntahall2233 Před 4 lety

    I will theach my paritkeets to do that

  • @jakiskillicorn9825
    @jakiskillicorn9825 Před 6 lety

    I have buggi and he two and he's bonkers like if I chad do a buggi video like if agree

  • @evelinaekholm1866
    @evelinaekholm1866 Před 4 lety

    Bastozzz

  • @aurellehaciu1330
    @aurellehaciu1330 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Zza😮

  • @neelubird
    @neelubird Před 7 lety

    I love you!! You're so beautiful!!

    • @carolwade3094
      @carolwade3094 Před 6 lety +1

      If you loved birds, you wouldn't buy one and make another trapper wealthier than he already is. There's no such thing as a "Cage Bird." They're not a domestic animal. How would you like to never see a human being again, and sit behind bars?

    • @nortinaa5624
      @nortinaa5624 Před 6 lety

      ...

  • @carolwade3094
    @carolwade3094 Před 6 lety +7

    There is no such animal as a “cage bird.” All caged birds were either captured or bred in captivity. In the wild, these beautiful beings are never alone. If they become separated from their flockmates for even a moment, they call wildly to them. They preen each other, fly together, play, and share egg-incubation duties. Many bird species mate for life and share parenting tasks. The evidence of their close companionship and concern for one another is plain to see.
    Unfortunately for birds, the very qualities that we find admirable and fascinating about them-their brilliant colors, speech capabilities, intelligence, playfulness, and loyalty-have made them the third most popular type of animal companion in the U.S. It’s estimated that 40 million birds in the U.S. are kept caged and often improperly cared for-bored, lonely, and a long way from their natural homes.
    Many people buy birds on impulse and don’t have a clue how much time, money, and energy is needed to care for them on a daily basis. Birds are as messy and destructive as puppies-something irresponsible breeders and retailers often won’t explain to customers.
    And unlike puppies, birds continue this behavior for 15 to 75 years. Additionally, birds can be extremely loud and demanding and sometimes severely bite their caretakers. Because most customers aren’t prepared for an animal companion who is as curious, needy, and demanding as a 2-year-old child, countless birds spend their entire lives trapped inside a cage that’s too small in the corner of a living room, basement, or garage, unable to use or stretch their wings and deprived of the vital companionship of other birds.
    Like dogs on chains, caged birds crave freedom and companionship, not the cruel reality of forced solitary confinement for the rest of their very long lives.
    Driven mad from boredom and loneliness, caged birds often become aggressive, neurotic, and self-destructive. They pull out their own feathers, mutilate their skin, incessantly bob their heads and regurgitate, pace back and forth, peck over and over again at cage bars, and shake or even collapse from anxiety. Even if a previously caged bird comes into a home in which he or she is allowed a rich, active life, this behavior persists and is extremely difficult to extinguish.
    The Truth About Bird Suppliers
    Just as there are puppy mills, there are now enormous bird factories where breeders warehouse thousands of parrots and other exotic birds and remove their offspring in order to sell them to pet stores. These birds are frequently confined to dirty, dimly lit cages, where they are unable to fully stretch their wings. There is no federal legislation to protect birds in the pet trade, and successful prosecution of cruel or negligent bird breeders is unlikely under most state anti-cruelty laws.
    A parrot-breeding operation in Washington state-which a veterinarian described as a “concentration camp” and where, according to news sources, birds “lived in cold, wet, filthy conditions for years”-remains open and continues to raise birds for the pet trade. The same lack of caring has been reported at breeding facilities across the country.
    Disease Is Widespread
    Bird-breeding factories often breed communicable diseases, too, from proventricular dilatation disease (PDD)-the symptoms of which include depression, weight loss, and constant or intermittent regurgitation-to papillomavirus infection, salmonellosis, giardiasis, and psittacine beak and feather disease. Sick birds can give humans or other pet birds chlamydiosis (psittacosis), salmonellosis, E. coli infections, tuberculosis, giardiasis, and other illnesses associated with bacteria and fungi.
    Smuggling Is Common
    Wild-caught parrots are also prime commodities in the multibillion-dollar illegal wildlife trade. Hardly a week goes by without another story of a bird smuggler who was caught with parrots in the air vents of his or her car, of small parrots being smuggled in jacket pockets, or of any of hundreds of other usually deadly schemes to import these valuable birds illegally. While many smugglers are caught, most are not, so thousands of uninspected-and frequently sick and terrified-birds enter the companion bird trade each year.
    When the Novelty Wears Off
    When the birds who seemed so cute and lovable in pet stores turn out to be noisy, messy, and demanding of people’s attention, many are later abandoned, and few live out their natural life spans. About 85 percent of parrots are resold, given away, or abandoned within two years of being purchased. If they are ignored, they suffer in isolation and may become even noisier, more aggressive, or more despondent.
    Caged companion birds are typically not native to the areas where they reside. They cannot be released simply by opening a window and letting them fly away (which would be considered a crime of abandonment in most states). Without the proper climate, food sources, and habitat, escaped or released captive birds become prey for free-roaming cats and wildlife or are doomed to suffer lingering deaths because of exposure, starvation, or injuries.
    Responsible rescue groups, animal shelters, and sanctuaries can only place or care for a small percentage of these unwanted birds. To complicate matters further, some alleged “sanctuaries” are actually thinly disguised breeding colonies or hoarding situations in which birds are housed in extremely crowded conditions, receive minimal care and attention, and may even be sold back into the pet trade.
    If you or a friend have a lot of time and resources and remain determined to have a bird companion, please adopt a homeless one from a shelter or rescue group, but only after fully researching their dietary, behavioral, and other needs. You are in for a great deal of work!
    Buying birds from pet shops contributes to a horrible cycle of disease and abuse, so to appreciate birds without buying and caging them, consider creating your own backyard sanctuary.

    • @abhajanviprasad8115
      @abhajanviprasad8115 Před 6 lety +1

      Carol Wade very insightful! Thanks for sharing this and enlightening me & many others. I was going to get myself a budgie but have now decided against it. They are happiest in the wild- free & flying! Thanks. 👍🏼

  • @zeevu9211
    @zeevu9211 Před 7 lety

    My birds 🐦 name is alen

  • @SallyAlexandriaAlexParakeets

    so cute,please checkout my video---Australian parakeets singing,dancing,eating

  • @MBison-im2qy
    @MBison-im2qy Před 7 lety

    this is prolly not the kind of chatter a non mirrorer budgy would ever speak. btw, burdy seems to mimic people whisper. lol