I had this happen but realized get them out the damn cage, they didnt have water and had them forced to eat only seeds.. now cage is open got them to eat lettuce,brocoli sorta make them throw it up, pool of water so one day theyll clean themselves
@@aryastark3148 wym?? that has happned to me when I started. I started doing research after that and eventually learned my mistakes. they are very healthy now and happy 😃☝️
Always carry a ziplock of parakeet treats with you when you go driving down that road. I have learned to carry a small amount of cat treats with me when I hike or go through ruins to feed the temple cats. There are always some there and they seem to know who the cat people are.
Because they are babies, and babies are more curious than their adults, since the adults will be cautious around things they haven't seen before. That's why it's recommended to get budgie's when they are babies so they can get used to human contact
Those pet store workers lied at me 😤 I bought 2 lovebirds and they said it’s tamed, when I came home the 2 lovebirds were scared and couldn’t get at my hand
That's ok, you shouldn't pet birds on their backs. That's mating behavior, and in captivity can lead to various self destructive problems like self harm and plucking. Pet them on the heads only. Not on their belly, not under their wings.
I have finches and they're the same. One came from an abusive breeder and another came from a pet store. They dont like being touched and that's okay, they sometimes will land on us or next to us to see what we're doing. That's all I need ♡
To people comparing these to their pet budgies. Budgies are very social and research suggests that they even name each other, but they're also very trusting by nature. The trusting behavior benefits them as large mammals like cows are safe while providing protection, but when you get a young budgie it has very likely seen the hand invade their cage and grab one of their siblings, whom they never see again. So at a very early age they come to view the hand as a predator. A few weeks ago, I introduced my budgie to a cat, (while he was in his cage of course) he kept on singing and playing with his toys while the cat was staring him down, a little while later he even climbed on the side of his cage where the cat was, maybe introducing himself. My budgie had never seen a cat before, and didn't know it would most likely eat him if he wasn't in his cage, but it has seen a hand "eat" one or more of his previous flock. It's what you get when you combine parrot intelligence with flock mentality. It can take a very long time for them to regain trust.
I dunno man, I didn't know what a shrike was and one had landed on my porch one day (a baby but was about ready to leave the nest) and I wanted to show my bird another bird since they sing to the birds in the morning. Well, my budgie wanted nothing to do with that other bird, and knowing what shrikes do to their prey, it astonished me how my budgie knew that bird could be trouble.
For anyone wondering why they are sitting on the window wiper. I think they are mistaking the windscreen for water, you can see them try to drink it. These desert birds are constantly on the lookup for it
Or they are attracted to the reflection. While wild, they still show characteristics of domestic budgies. Domestic budgies go "mad" chatting into the mirror.. Other birds (e.g. magpie-lark) can often be seen jumping all over a car and harassing the mirror and windows. The video caption says they weren't interested in the food or water on offer in the camp.
Everybody seems to be really surprised at how passive the wild budgies are. _This is deceptive._ While these little buggers were distracting the driver of the lori with their "cute budgie" act, their mates were going through the cab and relieved the driver of all his cash, his GPS, his cell phone, his bagged lunch and a sixer of Fosters. Two others siphoned off all of his petrol. To add insult to injury, after he was forced to abandon his lori on the side of the road and walk 11 km home, they called him at his flat that evening on his _own cell phone, drunk on his beer._ *Don't trust budgies in the outback.* Little wankers.
becaue these budgie are young and they don't tink human are dangerous. when they adults they more cautious and you can tell they are baby because they have stripe all around their head and they have beak with darker color
These budgies are all babies. That probably has something to do with how friendly they are. They look like they've just come out of their nest about a week or so prior to this video.
@@jjrj8568, This is going to be flowing in water but... WHATEVER! Every budgie has it. They are not new born or a week or 2. They are around 1 year old or younger. My Budgie has it, and even my brother has a budgie wich has it. My Budgie is a boy and so is my brother's. Actually, my brothers budgie is an adult. My Budgie is still allot younger. We got my brother's budgie as a gift, as mine was bought normally from a pet shop in Liverpool. And also, my brother's budgie has more than mine. This means that it doesn't include the age of the meaning. Stratocaster893 is not wrong or right. He is in the middle.
@@goldipaul4691 hmm, pal,the more stripes a budgie has on its forehead, the younger he/she is; old (+10 yo) budgies basically lose the stripes on their heads, ,the head is either fully green, blue or white
Not exactly. Prey animals will be scared against potential dangers even if they see it first time. Antartic animals are relaxed on land only since there are no predators.
Also humans are kind of big animals too. Not giant like hippos or elephants but still kinda big. A lot of animals might be a little cautious about attacking an animals taller than it. Even though for our size we are very weak. Also the budgies in this video are young, so they probably dont know what a predator is. If a snake was slithering towards one they'd probably go in for a closer look. When one gets caught the others learn snakes=danger.
Probably babies or young budgies who didn't see you as a threat. Younger budgies are more passive to humans and easier to tame. For example if they are hand reared from chicks they can associate the human as an odd part of their flock. The budgie you held doesn't really look sick. It's probably just a young one. His eyes and beak don't show any signs of ill health. Him closing his eyes seems to be very content. My first male budgie was very easy to tame from day one he was out on my finger. This particular flock probably has seen human interaction before. Wild animals can sometime associate with humans if there natural habitat is in close contact with human communities. They are wild but over the generations have learnt humans in their area are not a threat and humans equal easy food and water.
Ceesie007 to see if you learn a little more, look at the peak, are pigeons still possibly the generation that parents expelled from the nest to breed again, these birds small the cereo he looks pink or you would see white or blue, no you put to talk without knowing and having if you learn a little more ... what he says sweetdrag0n is true ...
They are very young. You can tell the age of budgerigars by the amount of barring on the head, as well as dark pigmentation in their beaks These guys are newly fledged, and from the amount of dark pigment remaining in their beaks, they are about 6 weeks old.
That’s because when they catch budgies the budgies get scared and don’t know what happens next those budgies are calm because they don’t think the guy will hurt them from grabbing them and putting them in a cage
@@devour9938 they don't catch parakeets they aren't natural, parakeets are Americanized budgies the reason why they have distrust is because cheap petstore parakeets are mother raised
I have to admit, it would have been difficult for me too. But these are birds that are used to live in nature. If they want to interact with you, that's awesome, but leave hem where they are at. They'll be more happy there. Cheers.
+TheOpelkoenjas Actually, they won't be more happy there. Budgie mortality in the wild is absolutely abysmal thanks to the harshness of their natural habitats, and otherwise-healthy birds will starve or thirst to death in the _millions_ if there's even a minor drought after a population boom. Wild budgies tend to live miserable, razor's-edge lives in constant risk of illness and death, and only survive as a species by breeding faster than nature can claim them - not a happy life at all. Plus, I'm pretty sure the baby budgie that was clinging to the guy in the video may have been slightly sick. Letting them live in the wild isn't better for them just because it's "natural", it's really closer to torture... You wouldn't let your children live in the woods just because our ancestors did, would you?
This is normal for outback Australia. The flies are everywhere in warmer months and there is nothing you can do about them. If you work outdoors, you have no choice but to endure dozens-to-hundreds of flies following and sitting on you all day long.
@@Ozraptor4 I don't care too much about spiders, snakes and the like, not that they can't be frightening but they're always avoidable. But to have this amount of flies around you constantly seems outright disgusting to me :( do you really get used to them to the point that they don't bother you anymore?
My pet budgie was very social. We'd let it fly in a bedroom for exercise but it was easy to get back in the cage. Later in life, when I had an aviary of 40 or so budgies, none of them were social to humans. You couldn't get near them (except for someone's escaped budgie who found the aviary and we let it in). They were extremely social with each other. The one that wanted in was very good to a more elderly female who couldn't fly. He would feed it (regurgitating food) and when she was climbing the wire from the seed bowls, he would climb with her chatting away until she reached the perches.
That means they do not trust you. You probably did someting to them or just have to have patience. A lot of people doesn't and they'll end up hurting birdies.
Hi verticalsmurf, Sorry I don't check in very often. There were budgies everywhere that day. The drillers had a big tent and it sounded like it was raining with all the birds landing and taking off. So, yes they liked the front of the truck but they also loved the fire-place, the tent, the caravan and some very tame ones liked us!! It was an unbelievable event, never repeated.
Cali Fresh Birds think mirrors are other birds. It makes them less attached to you, and lowers their sanity level. Please don't keep mirrors in a budgie cage.
I had a pet bird when I was 11, he was a finch of some kind, a neighbor found a nest and kidnapped them to sell. Wanting to be nice he gave me one. (I didn't approve of him raiding the nest but, it was already done). The girl that watched me and my brother while our dad was away insisted his name was 'Stef' after his 'father' (aka me). The little guy would poop on people that made him mad. He was pretty good about not pooping on you as long as he was in a good mood.
It's because they're really young. Babies are naturally more curious than adults. They've probably never seen a human before and wanted to check them out. Also, because they're wild they probably feel as if they can escape danger easily if the people turned out to be not so friendly, so they're a lot less fearful than what one in a an enclosed area would be
birds in pet shops deal with people (and kids) daily, being loud and not careful around them, not to mention pet shop employees who arent always great with birds, other animals around etc, confined space, I have a green cheeked conure, he lived in the petshop in a tiny cage with 5 siblings, the pet shop worker snatched him out like a damn predator grabbing prey, its taken 4 years to get him used to me grabbing hold of him even tho hes been relatively tame for the entire duration. They learn through experience, and probably havent dealt with predators yet.
I've driven through the outback in Western Australia, and walked it, never seen such tame budgies. Your video is a treat, watching all those little birds behaving so tame. I can't wait to get back out there and see for myself. Most of my family live in the area, my son-in-law works for Harmony. When I visited Harmony mine, near Leonora, I was surprised how tame the animals were. Perhaps you were drilling not far - as a budgie flies, from a mine where budgies went for a fuss and a feed. Please keep the videos coming. Thank you.
2017 and Time For Some Further Explanation. I don't check this video often and am amazed to see how many people have seen it. Thanks for all the nice feedback. Scrolling through the comments, there are some recurring questions and statements..............1. Yes the birds are wild. Check the other two videos on this channel if you have any doubt. It is nearly 100 km to the nearest town and 50 km to the nearest house. It is extensive bushland. 2. They are not thirsty. They were not interested in any food or water around our camp. 3. There is absolutely no way any of us would have taken one of these birds. They probably would have died if we did something so stupid. 4. The especially tame birds (most did not get close enough to handle) were not sick. 5. I have only seen budgies behave anything like this once. However, flies are like this every day in the bush. You get used to it very quickly. Now for some more context for those of you who are interested. The man who shot the video, Rob Wood, is not me. We were working together exploring for gold southeast of Kalgoorlie in Western Australia. The day before hundreds of budgies descended on the camp, six of them visited me and my field assistant while we were out working. Over the space of an hour or two they got closer and closer to our vehicle, like they were checking us out until one went INSIDE THE CAB. It wasn't scared when we very carefully went in and from there at least two or three of those six budgies landed on us and "played" with us. The cricket was on the radio. Maybe that had something to do with it.The next day, OMG, there were hundreds of budgies at the drillers camp. We all got to see them and interact with them. You see some of this in the video footage. Unfortunately (for me), I was not there when Rob shot the most amazing footage of the budgies on the windscreen. I had gone in to town to refill the water trailer. The budgies went out with the drillers to the drill rig. I am told that they were not the slightest bit put off by the deafening roar of the drill rig. They spent an hour or two swarming all over the mast, in and out of the cab of the truck and perched on the driller's helmets. Then they flew off and we never saw them again.Carl Brauhart Geologist Perth WA
thats actually a female your holding. every bird has there own personality just like you and me. some dont like to be held. some do. also the birds you get at the pet shop are treated very poorly by humams therefore they dont trust you at all when they get to your houses. it verys between every bird.
@@andrewperillo3446 but the amaxonhg thing, our unique bonds with our little featherball friends changes their mind wntirely, isn't it neat, one living person changes their opinion of an entire race, they hate everyone... until they love you! Like my little featherball Cherry the teil!
Amazing experience, thanks for sharing. At 0:58 you can see the budgie enjoying being stroked, and then the envious one on the right tries to get his head stroked too!
The one on his thumb is a very young fledgling. It still has the dark tip of a baby. All of these look like very young, just left the nest birds. They are less fearful then and probably just plain tired and overwhelmed! I am glad they came upon such a nice man!
When you left your budgie with your parents for college and come back years later only for the budgie to still perch on your hand: *"I'm still worthy!"*
Many years ago I was admiring some young parakeets in a pet store. I said to the sales lady they seem to be friendly. The sales lady said that they don’t know fear yet. I love parakeets.
me after watching this video: Tries to touch my budgie birb: So you have chosen... death Edit: this is only for the memes, my budgies are the nicest in ZA WARUDO.
Great to see young budgies only days out of the nest. These are only about 5 weeks old. I bred 100s of them in captivity years ago. I have also seen and filmed them in the wild in OZ but the ones I filmed were all adults and very wary.
one year ago a baby woodpecker fell from tree in my granfather's place, his wings were broken. we catch him calm him and we took him to a vet and she said that hes wings coudn't be fixed and he was a little baby so he never knew how to fly. today he still at my grandfather's place as a pet, sometimes we let him walk on the ground tho, we cant let him go because there are eagles and dangerous animals that can kill him.
@@kayaritvards9200 these are chicks. You can see it at the head. The stripes go from the back to the forehead. And the beak is black. That means they're really young.
One of my budgies used to go crazy to be let out when I relaxed with a scotch & soda to watch telly. He would fly over to my shoulder, nibble at some potato crisps off my chest, then waddle down my arm to take a few sips of my drink. After getting a bit pissed, he would hop down to my feet and sit there sleeping it off. Yes, really :) He had the run of the house too, the cat never bothered him and the cat also wasn't interested in eating him. Used to sit on my scanner on my desk, nibbling a sheet of A4 paper in half. They are such endearing little birds.
I get what you mean tho, I see animals at Petco and think, "your ancestors were running free in nature beating the odds, but you... *looks at domesticated anything* you couldn't fend for yourself if your life depended on it and I love you."
You need to get it used to you as soon as you get it. Most websites say to keep in its cage for a week so it is used to its surroundings. However, I prefer taking them from the box and talking to them gently while they are on your finger. It seems to work for me.
yeah you are right I feel the same if it's a baby budgie I prefer to keep it with me but not in cage. bcz if we put our budgie in cage, it gets used to the cage and thinks that cage is its safest place. so I keep it very close to me so it gets used to me and will eventually know that there no harm being close with me.
@@Opsdead They are adolescents, they aren't fully mature. You can tell by the striped feathers near their ceres and the small-sized throat spots rather than the full-sized.
@@Opsdead I've owned many parakeets(budgies) in my life and I can tell you those are young budgies. like SDG 91 said they still have their stripped feathers down their forehead to the cere(colored fleshy nose usually blue or brown or pink). Young budgies don't have the cautious nature of mature budgies and are more adventurous
Try having a Senegal parrot who's owners didn't want her after 14 years. !!! Now 3 years later after my having suffered 100's of bites from head to toe on a daily basis we are now the best of friends.
*Wild budgie when a hand approaches* :
hi how are ya :>
*Tame pet budgie when a hand approaches* :
so you've chosen _death_
I had this happen but realized get them out the damn cage, they didnt have water and had them forced to eat only seeds.. now cage is open got them to eat lettuce,brocoli sorta make them throw it up, pool of water so one day theyll clean themselves
3 out of 1 is tame
I was literally running away from my budgie cuz he was flying and chasing me 😟🖐
@@stitchuwu1998 I wish for the sake of the birds that people like you wouldn't have them.
@@aryastark3148 wym?? that has happned to me when I started. I started doing research after that and eventually learned my mistakes. they are very healthy now and happy 😃☝️
This guy afterwards: "you know, I'm something of a Disney princess myself"
Underrated
MIRIO HELLO
Damn good one too he didn’t even have to sing
Always carry a ziplock of parakeet treats with you when you go driving down that road. I have learned to carry a small amount of cat treats with me when I hike or go through ruins to feed the temple cats. There are always some there and they seem to know who the cat people are.
C est où sa trop mignon
How the hell are these wild budgies more tame than my pet budgie???
kingcrimson234 hahahaha
kingcrimson234, because they don't get grabbed at like pet ones
kingcrimson234 sad
Because they are babies, and babies are more curious than their adults, since the adults will be cautious around things they haven't seen before. That's why it's recommended to get budgie's when they are babies so they can get used to human contact
Teddy Barnaclezz all of them were adults. you can tell by the color above their beaks.
the people at the pet store: "they're calm and tame"
me: *Those bastards lied to me*
Lmfao
Those pet store workers lied at me 😤 I bought 2 lovebirds and they said it’s tamed, when I came home the 2 lovebirds were scared and couldn’t get at my hand
@@eissaalzaabi6587 the fuck ru saying dude u need to have patience
Blue sear boy. Yellow or pale pink girl. Very cute
@@qwantaa SHUT UP, maybe your that worker that lied at me
(But I still love and care about my birds)
Budgies in the wild: *tame*
My pet Budgies: You dare enter my cage prepare to loose a finger or a hand
Yes
you know, parrots are a great judge of character
Same
Those chicks are first time out of the nest which means still learning to fly. So that's why looks tamed.
same.
If a birb gets on your hand:
*"I am the chosen one"*
Yes birb not bird
@@saadsajidul9001 of course!
*Bird
@@Suge67 _it's intentional my guy_
Such an adorable birb😂
Wild budgie: *lets random human pet it's back*
My budgie: *screams and bites whenever I try to pet his back*
Not if you spend time with it, especially when it was a baby like these guys.
RayRayViolet because they weren’t meant to be pets!
That's ok, you shouldn't pet birds on their backs. That's mating behavior, and in captivity can lead to various self destructive problems like self harm and plucking. Pet them on the heads only. Not on their belly, not under their wings.
I have finches and they're the same. One came from an abusive breeder and another came from a pet store. They dont like being touched and that's okay, they sometimes will land on us or next to us to see what we're doing. That's all I need ♡
Sounds like mine
So kind to the birbs. That's the sign of a good man, how he treats animals. You can clearly see he'd never harm a single feather on those birds, ever.
Nobody asked.
@@HullzOSRSI asked
@@HullzOSRS Good job they don't need permission to write a comment then
@@HullzOSRS how about you fuck off? I like how kind he is to these sweet birds. Get a goddamned life.
@@HullzOSRS no one asked you to comment
While you are petting the budgies there was a fly on your hand petting YOU!
😂😂😂😂
@IwishIneverExisted d
There are flies everywhere so...
IwishIneverExisted d yea in Australia theres so many flies :( especially since he is in the dessert there’s many other flying bugs
So rare to find a tame human that doesn't violently kill everything
The fly had to pet it
This video has some of the greatest comments. I dunnowhy. LOL.
To people comparing these to their pet budgies.
Budgies are very social and research suggests that they even name each other, but they're also very trusting by nature. The trusting behavior benefits them as large mammals like cows are safe while providing protection, but when you get a young budgie it has very likely seen the hand invade their cage and grab one of their siblings, whom they never see again. So at a very early age they come to view the hand as a predator.
A few weeks ago, I introduced my budgie to a cat, (while he was in his cage of course) he kept on singing and playing with his toys while the cat was staring him down, a little while later he even climbed on the side of his cage where the cat was, maybe introducing himself.
My budgie had never seen a cat before, and didn't know it would most likely eat him if he wasn't in his cage, but it has seen a hand "eat" one or more of his previous flock.
It's what you get when you combine parrot intelligence with flock mentality. It can take a very long time for them to regain trust.
Makes sense
I dunno man, I didn't know what a shrike was and one had landed on my porch one day (a baby but was about ready to leave the nest) and I wanted to show my bird another bird since they sing to the birds in the morning. Well, my budgie wanted nothing to do with that other bird, and knowing what shrikes do to their prey, it astonished me how my budgie knew that bird could be trouble.
Ooh shit so what would be a better option?
I'm not sure if you should introduce your bird to you cat...
Wow uh interesting
The whole comment section is basically people saying that these birbs are more tamed than theirs
I can relate
But they are more tame
True
yes
what's the name
For anyone wondering why they are sitting on the window wiper. I think they are mistaking the windscreen for water, you can see them try to drink it. These desert birds are constantly on the lookup for it
Or they are attracted to the reflection. While wild, they still show characteristics of domestic budgies. Domestic budgies go "mad" chatting into the mirror.. Other birds (e.g. magpie-lark) can often be seen jumping all over a car and harassing the mirror and windows. The video caption says they weren't interested in the food or water on offer in the camp.
I love that he said "hey little man"when he was holding a budgie
😆
🤣🤣😂😂🤣🤣🤣😂😂😂😂
plot twist it was a little woman
@@Birbzz the one he had was a male. He (the bird) had blue on his beak.
@@gloria7876 I know, that was just a joke
Me: *Shows this to my pet birds.*
See? THIS is how you should act.
Birds: -v-
Grace The True Tortured Soul hHA 😂🤣
XD
Birbs:Well that's a piece of shi- ÒvÓ
These birb: Wow Hooman cool
My birds: ATTACK THIS UNHOLY BEING DONT LET IT TOUCH US
Lol i do this too
Everybody seems to be really surprised at how passive the wild budgies are. _This is deceptive._ While these little buggers were distracting the driver of the lori with their "cute budgie" act, their mates were going through the cab and relieved the driver of all his cash, his GPS, his cell phone, his bagged lunch and a sixer of Fosters. Two others siphoned off all of his petrol. To add insult to injury, after he was forced to abandon his lori on the side of the road and walk 11 km home, they called him at his flat that evening on his _own cell phone, drunk on his beer._ *Don't trust budgies in the outback.* Little wankers.
this is hilarious
They're all terrorists I tell ya!
Real Aussie men don't drink that Fosters crap.
You British people are funny
slidetek lol
I love how those "Wild" birds are like super chill, while my pet one used her little sharp beak to painfully pierce my skin while I was feeding her.
My budgie will only hurt me if it's playing or I swing my finger to fast
becaue these budgie are young and they don't tink human are dangerous. when they adults they more cautious and you can tell they are baby because they have stripe all around their head and they have beak with darker color
Wild Budgie: :>
My Budgie: *Biting and screeching his defiance as I save him from a pot of soup he dove into*
Honestly 😂
Your comment made me laugh and get out of bed this morning, thanks :)
Wild Budgie: Chilled and happy birb...
Pet Budgie: FURIOUS BEAST WITH A SOUL OF A CAT
Exactly
Lol
He's secretly a Disney princess
lol
That's the best one XD
snow white
😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Young birds. Just flew out of their nest, no idea of humans. I'm glad they found a nice guy.
I was worried they were sick.
The birds look like adults tho
@@magpieloaf8214 they don’t. Look at their large eyes and how striped their faces are. Totally babies 🐣
@@theabirde oh i see now
@@theabirde it also depends on how they stand. If their legs a far apart it's most likely they are young.
Man, those are some tame flies.
Oh, the budgies too.
Lmao
Lol
Budgerigars: hmm... yes, the window is made of window
Other birbs:THEY KNOW THEIR SECRET
That one bird: *Yes*
This actually funny
I'm surprised they're not slamming into it 😂
Logic!
These budgies are more tamed than mine
same
Same omg
True hhh
How is it true I don't get it mine just rage at me
+AshTheGreat Aj I give my bird my finger and it just stares at me like "what du u want me to do".
1:00 "Sir? Me too pls."
Mobin92 ik he was watching the other one being stroked and then he came over and looked down 😂
Ikr ! They're so smart !!😍
Los xD
2:40
Touching a birds back like that is a mating thing. You just gave all those birds a wild lap dance. 😂
It only happens to parrots
australia:buncha snakes,venomous spiders,basically a huge variety of predators
also australia:homes a lotta cute lil' birbs
And some big ones too....wedged tailed eagle, cassowary and emu.
Egorence
With the rest of the wildlife, cute things can only survive in the air
THIS IS SO TRUE LOVE EM OR OR LEAVE EM 😂😂
You forgot TO mention the blood-sucking courts if you're a Man...
@@TheDragonCat99 True. further examples include the flying fox and the sugar glider
I read the title as "wild bulgarians"
Disappointed once again
Aren't them the same?
I get cause they seemed to be like tamed even tho they're wild
"wild Bulgarians"
Just search for: Bulgarian dog spinning
lmao
HAHA 😂😂😂
These budgies are all babies. That probably has something to do with how friendly they are. They look like they've just come out of their nest about a week or so prior to this video.
exactly. Look at all those stripes on its forehead, nearly touching the beak.
Ahh that explains much. he was an inexperienced flyer and probably tired.
@@jjrj8568, This is going to be flowing in water but... WHATEVER!
Every budgie has it. They are not new born or a week or 2. They are around 1 year old or younger. My Budgie has it, and even my brother has a budgie wich has it.
My Budgie is a boy and so is my brother's. Actually, my brothers budgie is an adult. My Budgie is still allot younger. We got my brother's budgie as a gift, as mine was bought normally from a pet shop in Liverpool. And also, my brother's budgie has more than mine. This means that it doesn't include the age of the meaning.
Stratocaster893 is not wrong or right. He is in the middle.
@@goldipaul4691 hmm, pal,the more stripes a budgie has on its forehead, the younger he/she is; old (+10 yo) budgies basically lose the stripes on their heads, ,the head is either fully green, blue or white
@@jjrj8568, WE'LL IT NOT GOING TO BE 4 TO 5 CM TALLER IS IT!? AND IT WON'T BE KS ING WITH THE OTHER GENGER ON THE BEAK IS IT!?
I can see why they became so popular as pets when they're so curious as babies like this.
Fearing humans is actually a learned behavior. Animals from the antartic who've never had any contact with humans are generally friendly, too!
especially the polar bears!
because baby birds
@@РыгорБородулин-ц1е Polar Bears are not living in Antarctica...
Not exactly. Prey animals will be scared against potential dangers even if they see it first time. Antartic animals are relaxed on land only since there are no predators.
Also humans are kind of big animals too. Not giant like hippos or elephants but still kinda big. A lot of animals might be a little cautious about attacking an animals taller than it. Even though for our size we are very weak. Also the budgies in this video are young, so they probably dont know what a predator is. If a snake was slithering towards one they'd probably go in for a closer look. When one gets caught the others learn snakes=danger.
Difference between wild and store bought budgies.
One hasn't really seen people the other is traumatized by them
Phoeberia 100% true
These budgies are way to calm
@@captainruthless likely young to just they've been fed and interacted with before
Truth.
That explains a lot of the comment section i guess.
Can we just appreciate the fact that he is more focused on rubbing the Budgie's body than the flys that land on him.
He is Racist
@@svetoslav166 allllright then
@@thiloopsyy902 fr it was so random 😂
Idk I'd scream
There's flies everywhere in the Australian outback, especially in summer, ya sorta just get used to it.
It may be their only up close interactions with humans in their lives. Thank you for making it a gentle, loving one!
Probably babies or young budgies who didn't see you as a threat. Younger budgies are more passive to humans and easier to tame. For example if they are hand reared from chicks they can associate the human as an odd part of their flock. The budgie you held doesn't really look sick. It's probably just a young one. His eyes and beak don't show any signs of ill health. Him closing his eyes seems to be very content. My first male budgie was very easy to tame from day one he was out on my finger. This particular flock probably has seen human interaction before. Wild animals can sometime associate with humans if there natural habitat is in close contact with human communities. They are wild but over the generations have learnt humans in their area are not a threat and humans equal easy food and water.
No not young they are Adults you can see it on the blue dots on the cheek.
Ceesie007 to see if you learn a little more, look at the peak, are pigeons still possibly the generation that parents expelled from the nest to breed again, these birds small the cereo he looks pink or you would see white or blue, no you put to talk without knowing and having if you learn a little more ... what he says sweetdrag0n is true ...
They are very young. You can tell the age of budgerigars by the amount of barring on the head, as well as dark pigmentation in their beaks These guys are newly fledged, and from the amount of dark pigment remaining in their beaks, they are about 6 weeks old.
VeganDragon IT looks like a young one, you're right. I've raised more than 15.
Actually, in that area, they would probably have never seen a human before. So there is no fear - they don't know yet that humans are bad news.
- *pets a wild budgie:* budgie's like "yaay!"
- *pets a pet budgie:* budgie's like "DON'T YOU DARE PUTRIFYING MY PLUMMAGE..."
Yeah-
;w;
They are always like
Lemme just-
Run
That’s because when they catch budgies the budgies get scared and don’t know what happens next those budgies are calm because they don’t think the guy will hurt them from grabbing them and putting them in a cage
True phoneguy
@@devour9938 they don't catch parakeets they aren't natural, parakeets are Americanized budgies the reason why they have distrust is because cheap petstore parakeets are mother raised
Those flies are like: "We wanna be pet too" >:v
;(
naw they want to drink the sweat off his skin and if he were to die lay their eggs in him
I know that I am a SHIT TON of years late but I like this. An American says, 'Thanks mate!' God bless brother!
*Such bravery and trust!*
I know right? My tamed budgie won't even let me get my finger close to her
@@dahen2039 I don’t think she’s tamed then
@@kitolamus3238 she is quite violent and bites, but won't try to escape
I don't think that's why they aren't flying away lmaooo
@@dahen2039 I’m pretty sure that’s fear
It would have been hard for me to not take them home with me.
I would take each one of them home hahah
I would take them all and make a whole budgie army out of them.
I have to admit, it would have been difficult for me too. But these are birds that are used to live in nature. If they want to interact with you, that's awesome, but leave hem where they are at. They'll be more happy there.
Cheers.
Agree !! Admire the creature, maybe take a selfie or 2 and let go !!
+TheOpelkoenjas Actually, they won't be more happy there. Budgie mortality in the wild is absolutely abysmal thanks to the harshness of their natural habitats, and otherwise-healthy birds will starve or thirst to death in the _millions_ if there's even a minor drought after a population boom. Wild budgies tend to live miserable, razor's-edge lives in constant risk of illness and death, and only survive as a species by breeding faster than nature can claim them - not a happy life at all.
Plus, I'm pretty sure the baby budgie that was clinging to the guy in the video may have been slightly sick. Letting them live in the wild isn't better for them just because it's "natural", it's really closer to torture... You wouldn't let your children live in the woods just because our ancestors did, would you?
So what youre telling me is that their natural state is "friend object".
Yes! But humans treat them horribly in stores and the poor things become terrified of people
These are babies thats why they are friendly
@@honeyjar2970 there are way worse than shops and thats breeders who put them in a cage thats too small for 1 budgie
Not death biter?
Sunflower_ Honey oh that’s why my birds are hella scared of me
They’re all very young. You can tell that these little birbs are no more than a year old or so ❤
I have no idea how this dude isn’t freaked out by all the insects flying on his arm
This is normal for outback Australia. The flies are everywhere in warmer months and there is nothing you can do about them. If you work outdoors, you have no choice but to endure dozens-to-hundreds of flies following and sitting on you all day long.
@@Ozraptor4 I don't care too much about spiders, snakes and the like, not that they can't be frightening but they're always avoidable. But to have this amount of flies around you constantly seems outright disgusting to me :( do you really get used to them to the point that they don't bother you anymore?
@@mythras Never get 100% used to them (you notice them even when wearing a fly net), but you have to learn to grin and bear it.
Bailey satisfying more like disgusting
Once you have swallowed one or two , you get used to them
1:37
Bird : *Sits on the guys thumb *
Also bird : Why is tree walking
Xd
COPIED
Unfortunately these little fellas are paid actors
Sami Mertoglu hahahahaa
Doubt
lol (türk)
😂
Gd Roy Storm no shit it’s a joke
My pet budgie was very social. We'd let it fly in a bedroom for exercise but it was easy to get back in the cage. Later in life, when I had an aviary of 40 or so budgies, none of them were social to humans. You couldn't get near them (except for someone's escaped budgie who found the aviary and we let it in). They were extremely social with each other. The one that wanted in was very good to a more elderly female who couldn't fly. He would feed it (regurgitating food) and when she was climbing the wire from the seed bowls, he would climb with her chatting away until she reached the perches.
I’m crying at how these wild budgies are more tamed than my pet budgie...
They're babies. They'll get wilder.
SAME
same
Stolen comment
That means they do not trust you.
You probably did someting to them or just have to have patience. A lot of people doesn't and they'll end up hurting birdies.
Did you ever find out why these fledglings were so attracted to your truck?
Hi verticalsmurf, Sorry I don't check in very often. There were budgies everywhere that day. The drillers had a big tent and it sounded like it was raining with all the birds landing and taking off. So, yes they liked the front of the truck but they also loved the fire-place, the tent, the caravan and some very tame ones liked us!! It was an unbelievable event, never repeated.
+brauhartc Probably thirsty and needing some mud and salt. Gorgeous little things.
they like looking at their reflections. When I had some, we put in mirrors that they loved.
Cali Fresh and
Cali Fresh Birds think mirrors are other birds. It makes them less attached to you, and lowers their sanity level. Please don't keep mirrors in a budgie cage.
He attac
He protecc
But most importantly
He cute as hecc
And he pecc pecc pecc
@@mirsad96 and it hurts like hecc
This and the other two comments are funny as hecc
It's his way of giving love becc
He is so cute my heart is melting 🥰
This video alone is enough to make me want to move to aussie I love budgies they are soo cute and curious and friendly most of the time
I showed my pet budgies this and one of them pooped on me and went away....
Welcome to my life
Mahika *gives comment award* contrats , this made me laugh
😂
Girl! Give them some food
Gain their trust slowly
I had a pet bird when I was 11, he was a finch of some kind, a neighbor found a nest and kidnapped them to sell. Wanting to be nice he gave me one. (I didn't approve of him raiding the nest but, it was already done). The girl that watched me and my brother while our dad was away insisted his name was 'Stef' after his 'father' (aka me). The little guy would poop on people that made him mad. He was pretty good about not pooping on you as long as he was in a good mood.
😂😂
I don’t see how these budgies are way more tamed than my screaming, super spoiled pet budgies
It's because they're really young. Babies are naturally more curious than adults. They've probably never seen a human before and wanted to check them out. Also, because they're wild they probably feel as if they can escape danger easily if the people turned out to be not so friendly, so they're a lot less fearful than what one in a an enclosed area would be
birds in pet shops deal with people (and kids) daily, being loud and not careful around them, not to mention pet shop employees who arent always great with birds, other animals around etc, confined space, I have a green cheeked conure, he lived in the petshop in a tiny cage with 5 siblings, the pet shop worker snatched him out like a damn predator grabbing prey, its taken 4 years to get him used to me grabbing hold of him even tho hes been relatively tame for the entire duration.
They learn through experience, and probably havent dealt with predators yet.
If I held mine that that he would scream
You have to spend time with your budgie every day, you have to socialize it.
CoffeePigeon urs have aids
One day this will be in everyone's recommend.I rest here until then.
🙏
the day has come
Pffft
Hallo there
So it happened
I've driven through the outback in Western Australia, and walked it, never seen such tame budgies. Your video is a treat, watching all those little birds behaving so tame. I can't wait to get back out there and see for myself. Most of my family live in the area, my son-in-law works for Harmony. When I visited Harmony mine, near Leonora, I was surprised how tame the animals were. Perhaps you were drilling not far - as a budgie flies, from a mine where budgies went for a fuss and a feed. Please keep the videos coming. Thank you.
*looks at my budgie*
Budgie: *SCREAM! CRY! BITE!!!
Me: Q_Q i...I just wanna pet you...
Thats how i feel about mine -_-
My birds hate me
Because a prisoner will never love you.
Well, probably because you trapped him inside a cage
@Silverfang *Well,* you can’t just free them in the house like *that*
1:56 when he said hey little man it was so cute
Ikr
That's a female
@@Jazz__shh cute my cockatiel is a female
@@rosieluvswater1324 i want a cockatiel too
@@Jazz__shh it’s a boy actually
2017 and Time For Some Further Explanation.
I don't check this video often and am amazed to see how many people have seen it. Thanks for all the nice feedback. Scrolling through the comments, there are some recurring questions and statements..............1. Yes the birds are wild. Check the other two videos on this channel if you have any doubt. It is nearly 100 km to the nearest town and 50 km to the nearest house. It is extensive bushland.
2. They are not thirsty. They were not interested in any food or water around our camp.
3. There is absolutely no way any of us would have taken one of these birds. They probably would have died if we did something so stupid.
4. The especially tame birds (most did not get close enough to handle) were not sick.
5. I have only seen budgies behave anything like this once. However, flies are like this every day in the bush. You get used to it very quickly. Now for some more context for those of you who are interested. The man who shot the video, Rob Wood, is not me. We were working together exploring for gold southeast of Kalgoorlie in Western Australia. The day before hundreds of budgies descended on the camp, six of them visited me and my field assistant while we were out working. Over the space of an hour or two they got closer and closer to our vehicle, like they were checking us out until one went INSIDE THE CAB. It wasn't scared when we very carefully went in and from there at least two or three of those six budgies landed on us and "played" with us. The cricket was on the radio. Maybe that had something to do with it.The next day, OMG, there were hundreds of budgies at the drillers camp. We all got to see them and interact with them. You see some of this in the video footage. Unfortunately (for me), I was not there when Rob shot the most amazing footage of the budgies on the windscreen. I had gone in to town to refill the water trailer. The budgies went out with the drillers to the drill rig. I am told that they were not the slightest bit put off by the deafening roar of the drill rig. They spent an hour or two swarming all over the mast, in and out of the cab of the truck and perched on the driller's helmets. Then they flew off and we never saw them again.Carl Brauhart
Geologist
Perth WA
New sub for you
Dude. Plz pinned this
So the people can understand if that bird is real wild animal
Thank you for the added background info. Super sweet interactions. Looking for gold, whew thought u were mowing down a rainforest or something
Did you see George W. out and about?
👍👍👍
God is truly an artist. Those birds are beautiful.
I swear, I thought the title said *_Wild_* *_Burgers_*
Exotical Gaming lol me too
😆😆😆
thats actually a female your holding. every bird has there own personality just like you and me. some dont like to be held. some do. also the birds you get at the pet shop are treated very poorly by humams therefore they dont trust you at all when they get to your houses. it verys between every bird.
@@andrewperillo3446 but the amaxonhg thing, our unique bonds with our little featherball friends changes their mind wntirely, isn't it neat, one living person changes their opinion of an entire race, they hate everyone... until they love you! Like my little featherball Cherry the teil!
Cassandra Reynolds thats an interesting way to look at it.
The budgie seems to be pretty young maybe that’s why he was so calm
It's usually older animals who are more laid back.
Those budgies are young, seeing as they have stripes on their foreheads still
Its because they dont see humans as a threat because its their first time with them
@@foxxpenguin3036 yup, same thing with the Galapagos island birds
He was sleepy too.
0:59 the other bird is like "HEY i want some pets too" 🤣
soo good
The one he was stroking "I might be a budgie, but I ain't budgin', mate!"
Amazing experience, thanks for sharing. At 0:58 you can see the budgie enjoying being stroked, and then the envious one on the right tries to get his head stroked too!
Budgie: why does tree pet us
LÖÖÖPS 😂
The one on his thumb is a very young fledgling. It still has the dark tip of a baby. All of these look like very young, just left the nest birds. They are less fearful then and probably just plain tired and overwhelmed! I am glad they came upon such a nice man!
thank you for sharing this, its so nice to see cute birds getting the attention they deserve
Disney princess: *sings*
Any animal in a 2 mile radius:
Lol
*grabs them all*
i'll be taking these home thank you
Pffft petsmart tryna scam me of 20 dollars? oh heck naw!! i can go grab my own budgie from the wild!
@@findpicasso4364 I bought my budgie from a guy walking in the street with a shit ton of them at 2 dollars lol
I of rescue them
@@omni-man8647 Lol
I wish my budgies loved me like those budgies loved that truck 😭
O my God same.
Get a truck mask! 😉
@@mino73T11 😂😂😂
Become a truck and they will
POND Parakeet BAHHAHA same here same here
How good to see these merry little birds in their natural habitat, very trusting.
Everobody's Talking about the budiges
But why the hell is there so many Bugs?
It's Aussieland mate! Lots of flies everywhere. If there's not much bugs, there's a problem.
@@reswobiandreaming3644 Spiders?
Out in that country they'd be a lot of centipedes and scorpions as well. If not, there would be something wrong.
Flies are everywhere in the Australian outback it's not nearly as bad in the cities however
This is why you never eat food in the open, kids.
Him: pets birbs*
Me: hmmm let me try
My birb: are you challenging me?
Birb: Peace was never an option
Instead of running away you challenge me.
I can't pet you if I dont come closer.
Hoho! Then come as close as you like!
@@AJZulu zo warudo
Budgie: hey I got a tree that's taming me and walking 😍😍😍
wild budgies: tame af
my budgie: YOU WILL NOT PET ME. NOW GO GET ME MILLET
no ima drop it in they’re poop 💩
My budgie screams when I touch his back when he's In his cage
In my room he's like these in the video
When you left your budgie with your parents for college and come back years later only for the budgie to still perch on your hand:
*"I'm still worthy!"*
Reboot The Protogen Atleast he’s alive...
I would’ve took my budgie with me
@@tanyafullerton8168 I would have too
Oh lol THOR REFRENCE
@@OakleyKulu007 EWWW FURRY
The reason they are so tame is because they are only like 4 months old
No, it is because these birds were not dragged and took away from their parents or anything harmful for their life so they were happy to see humans!
If a predator comes and goes for their child i doubt the parents are gonna do anythimg
Yeah, look at the horizontal barring on their forehead. Maybe could even be younger than that
@@Michaeldemented94 Yeah i got mine when they were 3 months old and it looked exactly like that
Less than 4 months
Wild budgie: *Kalm*
My budgie: *RUN!! HE IS GONNA DEVOUR US!!!*
Only if he's in his cage or the room its in
Go take ur budgie to your room and then they will stay calm
😂😂😂
AMAZING!!! You lucky duck! Can’t believe how tame they are 🤩 wow!
Lovely video! The dark eyes and barring all the way to the forehead suggest these budgies are still very young. What a great experience.
Many years ago I was admiring some young parakeets in a pet store. I said to the sales lady they seem to be friendly. The sales lady said that they don’t know fear yet. I love parakeets.
me after watching this video:
Tries to touch my budgie
birb: So you have chosen... death
Edit: this is only for the memes, my budgies are the nicest in
ZA WARUDO.
My budgie is hurt my hand :s It is hate me 😐
My male budgie is a little OK with me touching her back but sometimes she tries to bite me but it feels like licking instead of pain trust me
OML
Gülin MUTLU I lost my budgie
My budgie was screaming to lick my finger, really
Cherish that rare moment, so jealous
Great to see young budgies only days out of the nest. These are only about 5 weeks old. I bred 100s of them in captivity years ago. I have also seen and filmed them in the wild in OZ but the ones I filmed were all adults and very wary.
time for me to move to australia
watch out for howtobasic
Hope you like spiders
@Gacha Kitty i live in Australia and i dont live in the outbacks but 2 weeks ago i found a red bellied back snake in my backyard
yeah but everything else would like to kill you so...
I live in Melbourne and there are bats and many types of birds flying around when the sun sets
one year ago a baby woodpecker fell from tree in my granfather's place, his wings were broken. we catch him calm him and we took him to a vet and she said that hes wings coudn't be fixed and he was a little baby so he never knew how to fly. today he still at my grandfather's place as a pet, sometimes we let him walk on the ground tho, we cant let him go because there are eagles and dangerous animals that can kill him.
Please do a video.
@Leland Acuna hey fellow redditor...
*tips Fedora
why only sometimes he cant fly away let him strengthen his legs
@@huntervarejcka3903 r/thathappened
Video or it didn't happen
@Leland Acuna it's really not that rare for baby birds to fall from the nest, you act like it's unlikely???
They a baby budgies So cute!!!!!!
They are adults, wild budgies are very small compared to pet ones
@@kayaritvards9200 i think they are young judging by their stripped feathers on their head to the cere but i may be wrong
Kaya Schaubloren Baby budgerigars have barring on their heads while adults don’t. They’ve also still got those black beady eyes.
@@kayaritvards9200 these are chicks. You can see it at the head. The stripes go from the back to the forehead. And the beak is black. That means they're really young.
@Rafael Suprayogi lmao what
It’s crazy how tiny they are compared to domesticated budgies, and so cute how they’re all so interested in the glass!
These ones have stripes all the way down to their noses, I don't think all wild ones are smaller, these ones just aren't fully grown
i own a budgie amd shes only about that big too, ive had her for almost a year now :)
Choose your path:
》Have your budgies bite your finger off
》Have wild budgies fly all over you and love you
So? What will it be?
Have wild budgies
Yeah
But also there’s flies swarming you 24/7
Have wild budgies fly over and love me :3
*I luv budgies-*
Wild cute budgies
growing up on a farm in australia really makes me relate to the sheer amount of flies all over him constantly
Sometimes I think I’m fly food. Does fly food even exist? I dunno.
One of my budgies used to go crazy to be let out when I relaxed with a scotch & soda to watch telly. He would fly over to my shoulder, nibble at some potato crisps off my chest, then waddle down my arm to take a few sips of my drink. After getting a bit pissed, he would hop down to my feet and sit there sleeping it off. Yes, really :) He had the run of the house too, the cat never bothered him and the cat also wasn't interested in eating him. Used to sit on my scanner on my desk, nibbling a sheet of A4 paper in half. They are such endearing little birds.
Hehe they're so cute....That one budgie feels like I'm the Chosen One! 😂
1:27 awwwww look at him!!
He/she luvs headrub.
i think he is sick
Its so cute i love it when there chuby like there kinda fat when they are not :)
This is one of those animals that it never occurs to you that “Hey, this used to live in the wild!”
Uh, captive bred like... exists
I get what you mean tho, I see animals at Petco and think, "your ancestors were running free in nature beating the odds, but you... *looks at domesticated anything* you couldn't fend for yourself if your life depended on it and I love you."
That’s how I feel about guinea pigs too!
@@parkchimmin7913 The capybara is a giant guinea pig :)
@@greathornedowl1783 They are! I absolutely adore them both 🥺
This video never gets old.
Very friendly budgies, and equally friendly flies.
Mine budgie only bites me ;(
Same
+Dr. Heisenberg it's about how much time you spend with it and how you look after it.
It's takes time :)
You need to get it used to you as soon as you get it. Most websites say to keep in its cage for a week so it is used to its surroundings. However, I prefer taking them from the box and talking to them gently while they are on your finger. It seems to work for me.
yeah you are right
I feel the same
if it's a baby budgie I prefer to keep it with me but not in cage. bcz if we put our budgie in cage, it gets used to the cage and thinks that cage is its safest place. so I keep it very close to me so it gets used to me and will eventually know that there no harm being close with me.
The reason they’re so tame is cause they’re mostly babies. They’re adventurous
They are not babies
@@Opsdead They are adolescents, they aren't fully mature. You can tell by the striped feathers near their ceres and the small-sized throat spots rather than the full-sized.
@@Opsdead I've owned many parakeets(budgies) in my life and I can tell you those are young budgies. like SDG 91 said they still have their stripped feathers down their forehead to the cere(colored fleshy nose usually blue or brown or pink). Young budgies don't have the cautious nature of mature budgies and are more adventurous
Mine is terrified of me. It practically makes a hole in cage to run away from me😅 , it's ok with my brother tho.
Subarashii
Well all you do is watch anime
Wild Budgie: "yes pet me more hooman i like scratches"
My pet budgies: " you dare touch me and prepare for your hand to become tomato sauce"
Petting a wild cat : aww
Petting a homecat : ima give u ten million scratches because you sit on my place
Try having a Senegal parrot who's owners didn't want her after 14 years. !!! Now 3 years later after my having suffered 100's of bites from head to toe on a daily basis we are now the best of friends.
Wild budgies:Yeah you can pet me
My budgie when im try to pet her: *ELEMINATE TARGET*
how cute. they love looking at themselves in the mirror. this is so cute omg
jinx gee 9ll9ll0ll9ll909ll0
jinx gee 9l90 9l9ll0l9llll.p.l
They think the glass is water because of the reflection.
+ashcustomworks Probably, I think they are young birds too not long out of the nest.
ashcustomworks they like their reflections
Yeah, but I think really only a budgie owner would be able to understand x)
They think it is another budgie
Nah the inside of the car was black and sitting in the sun.. They were probably enjoying the warmth.
People: There's so many bugs on his hands!
Me:
Welcome to Australia Mate
Aww so chonk and cute. Must be living their best lives out there :)