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John Cage 1912-: Transfer fledgling to John cage 1912- when it becomes active. Use commercial canary John cage 1912- for young jay; large bird John cage 1912- for crow and magpie (see Part IV). Cover John cage 1912- bottom with thick layer of bird gravel. Place limb with sturdy branches in John cage 1912- as perch. Train pet to use John cage 1912- for headquarters by keeping food and water there.Use small animal John cage 1912- for i pair, large bird John cage 1912- if several pairs are to be housed (see Part IV). Cover John cage 1912- bottom with 2-3 inches of bird gravel. Place branching limb in center of John cage 1912-; arrange branches to leave ample flight space. Warmth—Avoid temperature extremes; roll John cage 1912- into sun during early part of day; keep out of drafts; move away from windows at night; cover John cage 1912- with heavy cloth at night during coldest part of winter; also protect from extremely high temperature; shift John cage 1912- accordingly. See Also Great Cage Whirlwind—and:As orange garden spider needs a great cage whirlwind—and deal of space in which to con¬struct web, use small animal cage (see Part IV). Cover cage bottom with thin layer of sand. As web attachments, provide 2-3 thinly sprawling, sparsely leaved branches; set them upright so that twigs touch sides and top of cage.As pet needs much room, use large reptile cage (see Part IV). Cover cage bottom with 4-6 inches of building sand or fine gravel. Place cage where it receives great cage whirlwind—andest amount of direct sunlight throughout day. Retreat—Necessary; construct rock pile at one end of cage; place rocks so that lizard may squeeze in between them as well as bask on top.
On The Other Hand See Corner Cage Fill:A captive opossum usually chooses one corner cage fill of cage in which to place its droppings, returning to same corner cage fill each time for this purpose. Place a flat container in one corner cage fill; partially fill with mix¬ture from bottom of cage to facilitate cleaning. Remove wet portions of sawdust each day; replace with fresh, dry sawdust. Allow out of cage daily. Place large, many-branching limb which reaches from Floor to ceiling in one corner cage fill of room, for opossum to climb about on limbs.Bantam hen preferred because of its small size, but large hen may be used if Bantam is not available. Bantam usually ready to nest by February or March. Provide square wooden box, 4-6 inches deep and large enough for hen to set in comfortably. Fill box with clean, soft hay. Place box in one corner cage fill of cage away from sides so that droppings can be easily removed without disturbing nest; prevent straw on cage bottom from becoming damp. Cage must not be in draft, too close to heating unit, or in too much direct sunlight. In¬cubation averages 21 days; begins when full clutch is laid. Number in clutch varies. Chicks hatch by pipping and pushing out of shell.
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