Things You'll Need
- Cage or aviary
- Food bowls
- Songbird food that contains niger seed
- Maggots, termites and meal-worms
- Cuttlebones
- Canary nesting baskets, cup style
- Fresh grass seeds
- Clover with roots attached
- Hard-boiled egg
- Dried grass
- Feathers
- Twigs
- Horse body hair
Instructions
Breed green singer finches when they reach 12 months old. Breeding season begins in March and can run through October. The birds will breed at any time during these months.
Place the breeding pair together in a cage. Feed them fresh grass seed. Milk thistle and chickweed are also recommended. Fresh clover with the roots still attached is good to add during breeding season. Feed a good songbird seed mixture that contains niger seeds. During breeding season feed the birds termites, maggots and meal-worms. The birds will also consume live injured flies. Feed small amounts of live food. Too much can upset the finches' digestive tract. Green singer finches adore mashed hard-boiled egg. Always supply a cuttlebone and grit.
Watch for signs that breeding is imminent when the male begins to dance around the female. He will also try to feed her bites of food. The male will also sing persistently to her.
Place canary nest baskets in the cage with the green singer finches. Green singer finches prefer a cup-style nesting basket and they like it placed high in the cage or aviary. Provide ample nest material such as dried grasses, feathers, coconut shell fibers and even small twigs. Horse hair can also be used but never use mane or tail hair. Only use body hair. Mane or tail hair can easily become wrapped around a tiny leg and cause damage.
Watch for the female to begin spending time in the nest cup. She will lay two to four eggs. Incubation period is 13 to 14 days. The young will be full fledglings at 21 days old. The young should stay with their parents until they are five weeks old and then be removed. If the parents mate again they can become territorial toward their older young. The young green singer finches can also become destructive toward the nest of their parents.