
Tips for getting your budgie to actually eat those boring-little pellets:
Okay, first rule—don’t mix pellets with seeds right off the bat. That’s cheating, and your bird will just pick out the seeds anyway. Try offering pellets first thing in the morning when your budgie’s actually hungry. Sneaky? Maybe. Effective? Hopefully.
Since budgies are basically tiny dinosaurs that love foraging, scatter the pellets on a flat surface like you’re feeding chickens. Tap them around with your fingers like you’re a bird pecking at them—yeah, you’ll look ridiculous, but hey, if it works, who cares?
If your budgie’s being extra stubborn, grind the pellets into dust and sprinkle them on something they actually like—chopped veggies, a bit of fruit, even cooked egg or pasta. Once they’re eating that without a fuss, slowly make the pellet chunks bigger and mix in less of the good stuff until it’s mostly just pellets.
This whole process could take days, weeks, or months. If your bird’s being a diva about it, give them a little seed or fresh food later in the day—just enough so they don’t starve, but not enough that they’ll hold out for it. Once they’re actually eating pellets consistently, you can phase out seeds completely.
Or, if you wanna take the slow route, mix pellets with seeds and just gradually add more pellets while reducing seeds over time. Either way, this is gonna test your patience—and your budgie’s stubbornness.
Fruits & Veggies:
These should only be about 20-25% of their diet. Skip the useless stuff like iceberg lettuce—it’s basically crunchy water. And AVOID AVOCADO. Seriously, it’s bad news for birds.
Chop everything into bite-sized pieces (skin’s fine). Serve it separately from their main food. If your budgie gets obsessed with one thing (looking at you, apple addicts), cut back or take a break so they eat other stuff too. And don’t leave fresh food sitting out for more than a couple of hours—especially if it’s hot.
Water:
Always have clean water available. If your tap water’s sketchy, bottled is safer. Wash their dish or bottle daily—no slime allowed.
Human Food?
Basically, if it’s healthy, and you’d eat it, they can have a tiny amount (think thumbnail-sized for them, dinner plate for you). No junk food, nothing greasy or buttery, and go easy on dairy—birds can’t really digest it. And ABSOLUTELY NO: chocolate, caffeine, alcohol, or salty crap like chips.
Honestly? It’s Just using common sense. If it’s trash for you, it’s trash for them.

