All of our Australian parrots are beautiful. I can't choose a favourite. King parrot, Sulphur crested, Eastern Rosella, Crimson Rosella, Yellow tailedblack Cockatoo. I love them all, even the Galah.
One day out of the blue, my Yellow-Back Lori just started talking, first to my cat, "Get Down" "Stop It" when he climbed up to her cage, and then to me, "Hello" "How Are You"... No one had told me they could talk, so I never tried to get her to, she just did it on her own.
What an intriguing video! 🦜 The exploration of whether these parrots are real or fake is both fascinating and informative. The variety of species covered, from macaws to lorikeets, kept me hooked. Thanks for such an engaging and educational experience!
❤Fantastic video, thank you for showing a little piece of a great breeder for us, I congratulate you because it was a very educational video, I hope to see more with this style of programs, thank you for making the effort on your part for us, keep going Friend 🙂😜..
Cavity nesters face competition for a decreasing number of nest sites. Encouraging nest box programs really helps a variety of wildlife. The removal of trees in general but the removal of dead and dying trees is bad for cavity nesting wildlife. I have made a point to stop removing them from the wooded area of my property, as well as adding nest boxes of various sizes.
That looks like galvanized metal. Isn't that poisonous to parrots if they lick it over the long time? I had a lorikeet that passed away last march. Despite my best efforts in giving her quality feed, she grew vitamin d deficient which the vet suspects also made her calcium levels crash. She went so quick, hurt herself once from a crash and just wouldn't heal. I remember one of my biggest phobias in the start was the little specks of rust that the cage inevitably developed. Lot of good that did, I guess.
That’s why we produce quality feed to prevent these cases of missing vitamins, minerals and amino acids. Unfortunately the quality of most bird food is not sufficient
@@your-parrot I used to give mine Nekton and lots of fruit. Not so much Veg, she had a seed diet when I got her so she absolutely would not try anything new. So what about the galvanized metal? There is sooo little online about acceptable metals for birds. Most people will tell you "get a stainless steel one to be safe" but those are several thousands each!
What a great facility. I have to say, though, it’s ironic to me how these birds are legal in Australia, a country that is so protective of its own native species that they’ve banned the import and export of foreign reptiles & amphibians, as well as banned the export of their own native reptiles & amphibians... for fear of introducing diseases? Or possible invasion of non-native species, doing more damage than has already been done to the ecosystems. But it only applies to reptiles and amphibians, strangely. I mean, of course, this is a good thing-I live in America, for example, and at least I know that if I wanted a bearded dragon, a woma or carpet python, a White’s tree frog, or any species that’s Australian, it is likely guaranteed to be captive-bred. So for that, their law is a good thing. Also, Australian citizens have to possess permits to own native reptiles and amphibians. Which, again, is all they can legally own there… and yet the tropical fish, invertebrates and birds all seem fully legal there. As in, foreign species being owned in AU. I’ve seen Australian TH-camrs with fish & birds from all over South & North America, Africa and Asia, but couldn’t fish be easily dumped into the water and thrive there? The birds, they could easily fly away and survive? But they’re all allowed. 🤔 I live in San Diego, California, and we have no less than 15-20 species of (mainly South American) psittaciforme birds here, as well as other species like plum-headed and ring-necked parakeets, and several types of lovebirds. And Australia seems like it would be the ideal habitat for many of these birds if they ever escaped… I just wonder why they focus so heavily on the reptiles/amphibians but not the other animals. There are numerous places, including in Europe, where psittaciformes have formed non native populations. So it’s weird to me how Australia is so concerned with its herpetofauna but the concern seemingly ends there?
No birds are legally allowed importations into Australia. The ones you see have been captive bred since 1960 when the bans were put in place. Australian Aviculturists have been breeding macaws, caciques , exotic finches for decades. I believe a few parrots were allowed in during 1995 but were stopped when bird flu arose. Non Australian birds are very expensive and are required to be registered with some species needing a licence. Any escapees are quickly shot. With the native birds like parrots, doves and finches, most of our native captive birds species have been bred from wild stock that was collected in the 1970's. There are only 70 fish species that are allowed imports, mainly tetras, corydoras , bettas and livebearers. Every single fish not on the list has been spawned in captivity from the 1980's. Mainly cichlids. We have some excellent aquarists here as well as some fish farms. For example every bichir in Australia is descended from 6 specimens imported in 1983. To get a species on to the fish list is a long expensive process, the last one were pea puffers. It took 9 years of applications to have them an allowed import. The only reptiles we are allowed here are common native species that have been bred in captivity. There are huge fines collecting them from the wild. Most are descended from excess Zoo stock. We have a problem with the black market smuggling, every year hundreds of rare and endangered reptiles are smuggled/posted out of Australia. Species we aren't allowed to keep because of their rarity. There is also a black market in fish and reptiles being smuggled into Australia - especially boas, chameleons, geckos. They command very high prices. No mammals besides domestic live stock, are allowed in Australia, unless you have a Zoo licence. This can take years to process, however a zoo license allows you to import certain reptiles too.
America you can own almost any animal you want to. Rather be in America than AU where you have to have government permission to own a animal of any type
@@shannonmcpherson9886 That's a gross exaggeration. You don't need licenses to keep domestic mammals, tropical fish, domestic birds, marine fish and invertebrates, insects and other terrestrial invertebrates, axolotls, and common reptiles like bluetongues, Murray turtles, house geckos and the like. If you want to keep rarer species you need a basic wildlife licence and if you want to own crocodiles, emus, kangaroos, wombats etc you need an advanced wildlife licence.
@graphite2786 don't need any of that in America we own EMU,Ostriches,Rheas,Buffalo,Wambas,4 different species of Kangaroos and need no license or permit. I personally have alot of Australia reptiles
Love from India 🇮🇳 more power to Global Aviculture
Yes 🙌
And from Canada! ❤
❤❤
All of our Australian parrots are beautiful. I can't choose a favourite. King parrot, Sulphur crested, Eastern Rosella, Crimson Rosella, Yellow tailedblack Cockatoo. I love them all, even the Galah.
A birding vacation in Australia is on my bucket list. Love from Canada!
@@sandrastreifel6452 ❤️
@sandrastreifel6452 our birds are amazing
Love this!❤ I didn’t realise there were so many mutations😱
Countless!
This is Crazy... Amazing... Keep it up Guys.
One day out of the blue, my Yellow-Back Lori just started talking, first to my cat, "Get Down" "Stop It" when he climbed up to her cage, and then to me, "Hello" "How Are You"...
No one had told me they could talk, so I never tried to get her to, she just did it on her own.
Corellas are just the funniest , cutest parrots, even if they don’t have the spectacular colours of grass parakeets or frugivorous parrots.
Super sir🎉❤ great work 😊
Thanks a lot 😊
❤Love from the Netherlands! Just Love your video’s! Thank you for sharing!
Thank you very much! Greeting to lovely Netherlands 🇳🇱
What an intriguing video! 🦜 The exploration of whether these parrots are real or fake is both fascinating and informative. The variety of species covered, from macaws to lorikeets, kept me hooked. Thanks for such an engaging and educational experience!
Galahs are by far my favorite .. Clever, intelligent, funny, playful birds
@@janicegunter totally agree! Love them
Tolle Reportage! 👏
Wunderschöne Farbmutationen. 👍
Danke fürs "Mitnehmen nach Australien". 😊
Vielen Dank für dein Kommentar 🙌
Very interesting information about parrots,hope i visit Australia to see parrots in wild..i am Sandhya from india❤❤❤ intresting channel ❤❤❤
❤Fantastic video, thank you for showing a little piece of a great breeder for us, I congratulate you because it was a very educational video, I hope to see more with this style of programs, thank you for making the effort on your part for us, keep going Friend 🙂😜..
Thank you very much for your kinds words!
Humans: our cages are expansive
Birds: no cage is big enough. I’m used to flying the skies.
Most beautiful mutations ❤❤❤❤❤ comment from AAK Aviary Peshawar Pakistan regards Arbab Adam khan
Thanks 🙌
Very good!
What camera and lens are used?
MY LONG LENSE: Sony FE 5.6-6.3/200-600 G OSS
Vlog Lense: 28-75mm Tamron
@@your-parrot Very good
Cavity nesters face competition for a decreasing number of nest sites. Encouraging nest box programs really helps a variety of wildlife. The removal of trees in general but the removal of dead and dying trees is bad for cavity nesting wildlife. I have made a point to stop removing them from the wooded area of my property, as well as adding nest boxes of various sizes.
Big love and respect from Lahore Pakistan ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
Love from Canada! Hope your pellets come here soon!
We are working on it ❤️
Hallo,
wo ist dies Plazt in Australia, wo du in Video erste part warst? Ich suche genau so Platz. Kannst mir helfen?
Head down to guyana and get a view of these and a lot more in the wild
can you get get the vital pellets fruit mix in australia
Cool mutations 🤩
hi bro I love watching your content I really love birds❤️ but I don’t have more than one I really wanted to
Wow nice ❤❤ from India
Thank you so much 😀
Thanks for its❤❤❤😊😊@@your-parrot
Your every video is amazing but every time you missed one thing which is breeder's email address or their URL where any one can contact him.
😅 this is what you call being discreetly
@@your-parrot so you are deliberately not mentioned their's contact detail 😁 but why?
@@printec786 to protect their privacy
@@your-parrot so how can anyone buy their parrots? Specially who are not living in Australia.
@@printec786 these breeders anyway don’t sell in public. Birds get sold with certain contacts in certain circles
So beautifully
Very good informative video ❤
Very beautiful 😍
Love 💕 them all
Bravo from Romania Dracula land ❤🎉
Very eye pleasant ❤❤
Kinda sad to see the caiques without toys. They are extremely active. Besides that, good video!
호주에는 돌연변이 앵무새가 많네요. 멋진 영상 잘 봤습니다 😊
Is there any mutation of white alexandrine parrot ??
Nice video❤❤❤❤
Thanks
❤❤❤❤❤
Thank you
where you come from???
Love from Pakistan, Lutinos are amazing
Love from Pakistan 🇵🇰
Good morning ❤
That looks like galvanized metal. Isn't that poisonous to parrots if they lick it over the long time?
I had a lorikeet that passed away last march. Despite my best efforts in giving her quality feed, she grew vitamin d deficient which the vet suspects also made her calcium levels crash. She went so quick, hurt herself once from a crash and just wouldn't heal. I remember one of my biggest phobias in the start was the little specks of rust that the cage inevitably developed. Lot of good that did, I guess.
That’s why we produce quality feed to prevent these cases of missing vitamins, minerals and amino acids. Unfortunately the quality of most bird food is not sufficient
@@your-parrot I used to give mine Nekton and lots of fruit. Not so much Veg, she had a seed diet when I got her so she absolutely would not try anything new.
So what about the galvanized metal? There is sooo little online about acceptable metals for birds. Most people will tell you "get a stainless steel one to be safe" but those are several thousands each!
Follow you on facebook don't know you have youtube channel ❤❤❤❤❤ new subscriber 😊
Thank you 🙏🏼
Was wondering if the blue senegal parrot is real ?
Yes! Check out our Instagram and you see it
🇲🇦🥇🇲🇦👍👍👍
Love fram india ❤🇮🇳
Love from Bangladesh 🇧🇩
Yes they do.
Wow❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
About Alexander Mutation
Nice video india ❤🎉
Thanks 😀
Your audio would have been saved, along with my ears, if you had a clip on microphone, or whatever they're called. Those birds are loud lol!
Gutes viedeo
Vielen Dank Matteo
Wollte mal fragen wann wieder mal ein Update von deinen vögeln kommt
Where is the lorikeet farm located?
And can u please give me their contact number?
We always keep the breeders private
@@your-parrot I really want to collect some lory.. Is there any way.. If there us plz tell me. I am from Bangladesh
These birds are special they are not meant to keep in cage
Alright, where should they be kept then? 😉
@@your-parrotI don't mean your cages you have a beautiful aviary most people have small hardly to move for the birds I'm talking about that
❤
What a great facility. I have to say, though, it’s ironic to me how these birds are legal in Australia, a country that is so protective of its own native species that they’ve banned the import and export of foreign reptiles & amphibians, as well as banned the export of their own native reptiles & amphibians... for fear of introducing diseases? Or possible invasion of non-native species, doing more damage than has already been done to the ecosystems. But it only applies to reptiles and amphibians, strangely. I mean, of course, this is a good thing-I live in America, for example, and at least I know that if I wanted a bearded dragon, a woma or carpet python, a White’s tree frog, or any species that’s Australian, it is likely guaranteed to be captive-bred. So for that, their law is a good thing. Also, Australian citizens have to possess permits to own native reptiles and amphibians. Which, again, is all they can legally own there… and yet the tropical fish, invertebrates and birds all seem fully legal there. As in, foreign species being owned in AU. I’ve seen Australian TH-camrs with fish & birds from all over South & North America, Africa and Asia, but couldn’t fish be easily dumped into the water and thrive there? The birds, they could easily fly away and survive? But they’re all allowed. 🤔 I live in San Diego, California, and we have no less than 15-20 species of (mainly South American) psittaciforme birds here, as well as other species like plum-headed and ring-necked parakeets, and several types of lovebirds. And Australia seems like it would be the ideal habitat for many of these birds if they ever escaped… I just wonder why they focus so heavily on the reptiles/amphibians but not the other animals. There are numerous places, including in Europe, where psittaciformes have formed non native populations. So it’s weird to me how Australia is so concerned with its herpetofauna but the concern seemingly ends there?
No birds are legally allowed importations into Australia. The ones you see have been captive bred since 1960 when the bans were put in place.
Australian Aviculturists have been breeding macaws, caciques , exotic finches for decades. I believe a few parrots were allowed in during 1995 but were stopped when bird flu arose.
Non Australian birds are very expensive and are required to be registered with some species needing a licence. Any escapees are quickly shot.
With the native birds like parrots, doves and finches, most of our native captive birds species have been bred from wild stock that was collected in the 1970's.
There are only 70 fish species that are allowed imports, mainly tetras, corydoras , bettas and livebearers. Every single fish not on the list has been spawned in captivity from the 1980's. Mainly cichlids. We have some excellent aquarists here as well as some fish farms. For example every bichir in Australia is descended from 6 specimens imported in 1983. To get a species on to the fish list is a long expensive process, the last one were pea puffers. It took 9 years of applications to have them an allowed import.
The only reptiles we are allowed here are common native species that have been bred in captivity. There are huge fines collecting them from the wild. Most are descended from excess Zoo stock.
We have a problem with the black market smuggling, every year hundreds of rare and endangered reptiles are smuggled/posted out of Australia. Species we aren't allowed to keep because of their rarity.
There is also a black market in fish and reptiles being smuggled into Australia - especially boas, chameleons, geckos. They command very high prices.
No mammals besides domestic live stock, are allowed in Australia, unless you have a Zoo licence. This can take years to process, however a zoo license allows you to import certain reptiles too.
America you can own almost any animal you want to. Rather be in America than AU where you have to have government permission to own a animal of any type
@@shannonmcpherson9886 That's a gross exaggeration. You don't need licenses to keep domestic mammals, tropical fish, domestic birds, marine fish and invertebrates, insects and other terrestrial invertebrates, axolotls, and common reptiles like bluetongues, Murray turtles, house geckos and the like. If you want to keep rarer species you need a basic wildlife licence and if you want to own crocodiles, emus, kangaroos, wombats etc you need an advanced wildlife licence.
@graphite2786 don't need any of that in America we own EMU,Ostriches,Rheas,Buffalo,Wambas,4 different species of Kangaroos and need no license or permit. I personally have alot of Australia reptiles
"Moo-tay-shun." 🐮 Lol 😂 Think like a cat "mew." Say "MEW-tay-shun" to pronounce "mutation" correctly.
Thats depressing...its a parrot prison 😢