For approved early pickup only
Beginner Guide: Hand-Feeding an Unweaned Cockatiel
This guide is provided to families who have discussed and agreed on an early hand-feeding arrangement with Kensington Aviary. Most babies go home only after they are fully weaned. This guide does not replace advice from an avian veterinarian.
⚠️ Safety first
Hand-feeding is a serious responsibility. Incorrect formula temperature, feeding too fast, feeding when the crop is not empty, or formula entering the airway can cause illness or death. Contact an avian veterinarian immediately if you see formula from the nostrils, coughing, choking, a crop that does not empty, or a weak or unresponsive baby.
📽️ Reference videos
Watch these before your first feeding. The first two are from Kensington Aviary.
- Hand-feeding formula provided or recommended by Kensington Aviary
- Clean feeding syringes and silicone shield nipples
- Accurate digital food thermometer — do not guess temperature with your finger
- Small clean mixing cup, warm water, paper towels
- Digital gram scale for daily weighing
- Small warm brooder or carrier if the baby still needs extra warmth
- Millet spray, seed mix, soft foods, and fresh water for weaning practice
- Contact information for an avian veterinarian
Do not microwave formula — it creates dangerous hot spots even when it feels warm overall.
Target range: 102–105°F at the time of feeding. Always measure with a thermometer before every feeding.
Too cold
Digestion slows. Baby may not digest properly and can become ill.
Too hot
Can burn the crop. Crop burns are serious and may require veterinary treatment.
- Never microwave prepared formula
- Never feed without checking temperature first
- Never reuse leftover formula — discard after each feeding
For a 6-week-old cockatiel, formula should be smooth, warm, and creamy — not watery, lumpy, or paste-thick. Always follow the brand's mixing ratio. If Kensington Aviary gives you a specific ratio for your bird, use that.
- Mix with warm water and stir thoroughly
- Let sit briefly if the product instructions require it
- Check temperature before every feeding
- Discard any leftover mixed formula — never save for later
The crop is the food-storage pouch at the front lower neck. After feeding it becomes softly rounded. Before the next feeding it should be mostly empty.
✅ Normal
- Before feeding: mostly empty or clearly reduced
- After feeding: softly rounded and gentle
- Empties overnight and between feedings
Contact vet if crop is
- Hard or tight
- Sour-smelling
- Still full many hours after feeding
- Cold, discolored, or overly stretched
A crop that stays full can become sour crop or crop stasis — both require urgent veterinary attention.
At around 6 weeks, most cockatiels are transitioning toward weaning and may need fewer formula feedings than a younger chick. A typical starting point:
- Morning — formula feeding
- Evening — formula feeding
- Mid-day — only if the baby is not eating enough solid food, is losing weight, or Kensington Aviary recommends it
Do not feed by the clock alone. Watch the bird, check the crop, and weigh daily. Weigh every morning before feeding at the same time. Steady weight loss, crop delay, or weakness needs prompt attention.
✅ Correct position
- Baby upright and stable, feet supported
- Head naturally forward, not stretched backward
- Offer syringe tip gently from the front/side of beak
- Wait for the baby to show a feeding response before giving formula
- Give small amounts, pause, let baby swallow, continue slowly
- Stop when crop is comfortably rounded — not tight
Stop immediately if
- Formula comes from the nostrils
- Baby coughs, chokes, or gasps
- Wet, clicking, or wheezing breathing sounds
- Baby becomes limp or stops responding
- Baby repeatedly refuses food
Never feed a baby lying on its back. Never force formula. Never push the syringe tip deep into the throat.
Weaning should be gradual. Offer solid foods every day alongside formula — millet spray, seed mix, soft vegetables, pellets if introduced, and fresh water in a shallow dish. Do not remove formula suddenly just because the baby pecks at seed.
- Reduce formula only when the baby consistently eats solid food independently
- Track weight daily — it should stay stable through weaning
- Offer millet spray, seed mix, soft greens, and water at all times
- Do not rush — forced weaning causes stress, weight loss, and behavioral problems
- Wipe formula from the baby's beak and feathers with a warm damp cloth
- Wash the syringe immediately after each use
- Rinse and sanitize the silicone shield nipple thoroughly
- Let tools dry fully before the next feeding
- Discard leftover formula — never reuse
Warm formula supports rapid bacterial and yeast growth. Dirty tools can cause serious infections in baby birds.
| Morning weight | ______ grams (weigh before feeding) |
| Crop empty? | Yes / No |
| Morning formula | ______ mL |
| Solid food eaten? | Yes / No / Unsure |
| Water observed? | Yes / No |
| Evening crop | Empty / Partly full / Full |
| Evening formula | ______ mL |
| Droppings normal? | Yes / No |
| Activity normal? | Yes / No |
| Any concerns | ___________________________ |
Contact Kensington Aviary if you notice weight loss, poor appetite, crop delay, abnormal droppings, or behavior changes.
- Always check formula temperature with a thermometer — never guess
- Never microwave prepared formula
- Never feed cold or overheated formula
- Never force-feed
- Never feed a baby lying on its back
- Never feed if the crop is still full
- Never overfill the crop
- Never continue if the baby coughs, chokes, or formula comes from the nostrils
- Always clean feeding tools after every feeding
- Always monitor daily weight
- Contact an avian veterinarian quickly if something seems wrong — do not wait
Questions about your bird's feeding? Contact Kensington Aviary — we are here to help through the process.