Blue and Blue Pied Peach Face Lovebirds
lovebirds mutationBlue Mutation of Peach Face Lovebird
What a fake! Child Blue is an agreeable beastie of mine, totally mature kin to the lovebird infants displayed underneath. Dutch Blue lovebirds require about an entire year to arrive at their gem-like somewhat blue-green shading. These are not “good ‘ole fashioned” birds like you get with Fischer's – thus you will not get a pale-skinned person peach-confronted lovebird (which is a blue-based bird) yet you can get pale-skinned person Fischer's lovebirds.



Children of Remi and Winnie
Children of Remi and Winnie
These are the infants of Remi and Winnie, their fifth grasp These children were sweet as buttons, very much like all of Remi and Winnie's infants Remi and Winnie were children raised by me, so their children are my subsequent age infants.
Hand-took care of lovebird infants
Hand-took care of lovebird children
The wild-type shading of peach-confronted lovebirds is green. Blue is the “ground tone” change – you can have numerous transformations that fluctuate in view of whether the bird is “green” or “blue”. Consider it an expanding hereditary tree – with Green or Blue first, then, at that point, you could have pied – blue pied or green pied, you could have a Blue American cinnamon or a Green American Cinnamon, and so on. The ground tone essentially influences everything with regard to transformations.
You additionally have “factors” – like Dark Factor and Violet Factor. The dull variable essentially obscures the shade of the bird. So a blue transformation with one dim component would be called Medium Blue – assuming it had two dull variables it would be Slate (certain individuals call this mauve).
Violet Green
Green violets are a typical wild-type green peach confronted lovebird with the violet component, found in the shading of the backside.
Green violet infants in the brooder
Infants require a long time to get the full red face (around 1 year); this is one more method for advising you to have a youthful bird (see mature tones beneath).
The violet element gives the general body shading a more profound green tone with a pale blue tone to it. The tips flight feathers are blue. The ocean side face is a more profound red, obscured also by the violet variable.
It requires a year for the shadings to grow totally. The back end is as of now a profound violet tone, despite the fact that it is hard to genuinely get this tone in a photo. I intend to save a portion of these infants for future rearing since the shading is only heavenly as I would see it. The following is a grown-up male. He is as yet shedding marginally.



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Green violet male
American Cinnamon
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Whiteface Cinnamon Pied
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Cinnamon pied lovebird
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Whiteface Cinnamon with Violet Factor
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White-confronted American cinnamon child
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American Cinnamon
Violet Factor and Whitefaced Violet
There are incredible varieties in the body tone starting with one violet then onto the next. The violet back end shows the bird conveys the violet variable. Whiteface likewise can change from a profound apricot band across the brow to an unadulterated white veil. The hen underneath likewise has dull elements, giving her general body a wonderful blueberry tone.
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Whiteface violet hen: note the nearly
blueberry shade to her general quills
Here is a couple:
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Violet Factor
Pied violet is my beloved shading assortment of peach-confronted lovebirds (from a whiteface violet chicken and pied record hen):
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Blue pied lovebird with the violet element
What a beautiful child in the above photograph! The whiteface pied violet above is especially lovely, nearly “clear” with not many pied markings on the back. The yellow with the violet hints is mind-blowing and will turn out to be more lively when the child arrives at complete development in around 9 months. Here is a front shot of an extremely clear pied:
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Extremely clear pied; violet variable
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White-confronted male; violet component
Here are some child pics:
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Violet element children
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Violet variable children; pied
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Intensely pied
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Intensely pied violet
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Intensely pied



The guardians are Valentino and Boomerang:
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Australian Cinnamon and Orange-Faced Lovebirds
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Australian Cinnamon and Lutino Lovebirds
Matilda (above, left) is a green series Australian cinnamon hen. Her mate (to one side) is an orange-colored lutino. Since these are both sex-connected changes, I will know by the shade of their children what their sex is. All the Australian cinnamon children will be guys and all the lutino infants will be hens.
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Frontal area: Australian Cinnamon hen
Australian cinnamon birds have ruby-shaded eyes (this can blur a considerable amount as they mature, yet is extremely particular in children).
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Left: Australian cinnamon hen;
Right: Orangefaced Lutino Male
The lutino is a red-looked-at-the-transformation. The orange-colored change is STILL important for the peach-confronted lovebird species – it is just a shading transformation of that species.
Matilda's cover has still not totally shaded out. She is around 7 months old here.
Presently the above birds are classified as “green series” changes. Assuming you have these equivalent changes in “blue series” transformations, they communicate their thoughts in an unexpected way, per the photos beneath.
Sydney (underneath) is a blue series Australian cinnamon. She has no shading in the face. The shading you see (the slight orange) is only some shading that fell off her swing (food shading).
The following is one more photograph of Sydney, the blue series Australian cinnamon hen. She is a child in these three photos (under 90 days old) and her tone has not completely evolved.
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Blue series cinnamon
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Blue series cinnamon lovebird
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Sydney at 90 days
“Cobalt” – Slate, Double Dark Factors
Cobalt with twofold violet variable (blue series) peach-confronted lovebird
Mother: American Cinnamon Violet Peach-confronted Lovebird
Father: Slate Peach-confronted Lovebird
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Twofold dull component/Violet Lovebird
This lovebird child's mother is the cousin of Buttercup's mother. The child's father is a whiteface record with just a sprinkle of the apricot band. They had three infants like this, and one that is an exquisite pale American Cinnamon Seagreen violet. Their last grip was generally American cinnamon violets.
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Record (Storm) and Whiteface
American Cinnamon (Delilah)
What is a record? A record is a blue series bird that has a twofold dim variable. It tends to be an exceptionally dim bird and the body can go from a dark green to a practically dim shading. The rear end is profound dim.
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This is a grown-up male of the guardians above.
He is a cobalt violet. The image is a little
excessively dim to genuinely show his tones.
This is a grown-up male of the guardians above. He is a cobalt violet. The image is all in all too dim to really show his tones.
What is cobalt? Cobalt is one more approach to saying a blue series lovebird with a dim element. This develops the body tone extensively. You can in any case see the violet in the backside.
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Children
Not entirely set in stone by the violet backside. In this way, a violet lovebird's body tone can go significantly from a greenish-blue to a profound dim green, contingent upon such hereditary variables as dim elements, and so forth
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Record lovebird hen



Beneath: American cinnamon child from Delilah and Storm. Conceived April 2000. Beneath that is an image of kin who is cobalt violet. Both photographs were taken in May 2000.
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American cinnamon
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Twofold dim component violet
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More Babies
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Lyla Baby – her folks are Storm and Delilah,
imagined on this page
Fischer's Mutations: Albino, Lutino, Yellow, White
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Lutino and Albino Mutations of Fischer's Lovebirds
Fischer's lovebirds are something else altogether from Peachfaces. These birds likewise arrive in an assortment of tones, from the wild-type green to the emotional lutino and dazzling pale-skinned person.
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Tequila and Tundra
I have viewed these birds as very delicate, regardless of whether they haven't been dealt with routinely. Assuming you need a pet it is still best to get a handfed child that has been all around mingled. In any case, I have observed many Fischer's more straightforward to tame again on the off chance that they've been permitted to “go wild,” not at all like most peach faces.
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Lutino and pale-skinned person changes
Tundra (pale-skinned person) and Tequila (lutino) are shocking Fischer's lovebirds – nicknamed TnT!
Yellow Fischers (Green Series – Split Info)
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Yellow Mutation
White Mutations:
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White change of Fischer's lovebird
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White change