Ttystikk's vertical goodness

OLD MOTHER SATIVA

Well-Known Member
This is why you train them to fly to you, so you can go outside and it will fly down to you.

It happened to some friends.

yes of course..but once outside in the large and confusing outside its a tough thing for a budgie to get back..


they can be retrieved [sometimes]..its a tough job being a budgie
 

Big_Lou

Well-Known Member
yeh thats sad..there are no dumb budgies ..just dumb or at times tuned out..budgie owners[close window doors]
This is why you train them to fly to you, so you can go outside and it will fly down to you.

It happened to some friends.
Yeah, he was (reasonably?) well trained, at least enough to fly around the house and land on select people. My parents told us (placative lie?) that he, as many animals do, went off to "pass away in the wild".
To be fair, he was very old. :cry:
 

DesertGrow89

Well-Known Member
Pot size is not a reliable indicator of eventual results, lol
True, a big part of the problem was trying to grow at 44 lattitude with cheap greenhouses. We had temps hitting 115 in mid summer and lows in the 30s in october.. PM was definitely a problem. I've heard silica and neem oil sprayed twice a week in flower is a great PM preventative. A 1% hydrogen peroxide solution worked well for getting rid of the stuff, but the problem was it spread so quickly and was virtually uncontrollable. They had us doing foliars 2-3 times a day with a 2 gallon fogger on 260 plants.. It was dumb. Almost always used thrive alive green and yucca, some expensive crap from nectar of the gods. Terpinator was used in flower, which is just 4% soluble potash derived from potassium sulfate... Another expensive bottle of water from the hydro store.
 

Vnsmkr

Well-Known Member
True, a big part of the problem was trying to grow at 44 lattitude with cheap greenhouses. We had temps hitting 115 in mid summer and lows in the 30s in october.. PM was definitely a problem. I've heard silica and neem oil sprayed twice a week in flower is a great PM preventative. A 1% hydrogen peroxide solution worked well for getting rid of the stuff, but the problem was it spread so quickly and was virtually uncontrollable. They had us doing foliars 2-3 times a day with a 2 gallon fogger on 260 plants.. It was dumb. Almost always used thrive alive green and yucca, some expensive crap from nectar of the gods. Terpinator was used in flower, which is just 4% soluble potash derived from potassium sulfate... Another expensive bottle of water from the hydro store.
I lol'ed when I read this. I certainly agree with your assessments. Tell us how you really feel lmao
 

DesertGrow89

Well-Known Member
If you work an IPM program in from the get go then those problems are minimal...most people just try to manage it after its already an issue
Excellent point. They had us spraying in rotation azamax, azatrol, and zero tolerance fungicide/insecticide. Neem oil I'm sure is cheaper and probably more effective than Rosenthals or any other product out there at the dro store.
 

Vnsmkr

Well-Known Member
I used to have a cockatiel, I love birds!
We had cockatiels, cockatoos, parakeets, and a 75 year old parrot who had one eye; the other was put put by a rock when she was riding in her cage in the back of a truck in the 30's. She was the coolest old parrot ever, loved us kids, hated the parents lol. She sang and talked as well. She died when she was in her 80's in our years.
 
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