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Harrison's Bird Foods High Potency Fine Certified Organic Non GMO Formula Bird Food 1lb

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$20.46

$ 9 .99 $9.99

In Stock

1.:25 Pound (pack Of 1)


2.PatternName:High Potency-fine


About this item

  • FOR SMALL TO MEDIUM BIRDS: Specially formulated by avian nutritionists for small to medium-sized birds - a nutrient-dense formula of certified organic, non-GMO whole grains and legumes, with naturally occurring vitamins and minerals. Our cockatiel food, parakeet food, lovebird food, conure bird food, and bird treats provide a high-potency nutritional formula for small to medium-sized birds. Ensure your feathered friends get the essential nutrients they need with our premium blend of bird food.
  • CERTIFIED ORGANIC GOODNESS: Crafted with certified organic, heritage human grade ingredients with the perfect addition of naturally occurring vitamins and minerals, including balanced Omega 3 & 6 fatty acids to ensure the highest quality, complete, balanced nutrition for your bird. As the first and number one veterinary recommended certified organic pet bird food company, we take pride in providing exceptional bird foods and bird treats to help your bird live a happier and healthier life.
  • VERSATILE USAGE FOR VARIOUS BIRD NEEDS: Harrison's Bird Foods High Potency Fine is a versatile, nutrient-dense bird food supporting birds through conversion, special needs, molting, weight management, and recovery from illness. Essential for breeding birds and weaning chicks, it ensures optimum nutrition for the various life stages for small to medium birds.
  • GUARANTEED NUTRITIONAL ANALYSIS: With a minimum of 18.5% crude protein, 12% crude fat, 3.7% omega-6 fatty acids, 0.5%, omega-3 fatty acids, a maximum of 6% crude fiber and 10% moisture, our formula meets the dietary requirements of medium to large birds. The added fatty acids contribute to a healthy coat and vibrant plumage. Give your birds the nutrition they deserve with our premium blend of bird feed.
  • HUMAN QUALITY INGREDIENTS, NO BLEACHING, DYING, OR OVER PROCESSING: We prioritize your bird's health by using only certified organic, whole food human-grade ingredients with the perfect addition of naturally occurring vitamins and minerals for a complete, balanced diet. All the nutrition your birds needs, without toxic pesticides, fungicides, and herbicides. A food that will make your bird feel good, and that you can feel good about feeding.



Product Description

High Potency Fine

Bag of High Potency Fine

A Maximum Nutritional Formula for Small to Medium Birds

HIGH POTENCY FINE is a year-round formula for conures, lories, quakers, cockatiels, budgies (parakeets), lovebirds, doves and other small to medium birds.

Harrison's Bird Foods - High Potency Fine

High Potency Fine small and medium birds

USES

• Conversion: All birds should start and remain on High Potency Formula for a period of at least 6 months.

• Special Needs: For birds that are molting, overweight, underweight, particularly active, housed in a cold climate, recovering from an illness or affected by liver or kidney disease.

• Breeding Birds: Feed High Potency Formula to all breeding birds.

• Weaning Birds: Feed High Potency Formula for at least 6-9 months after weaning.

High Potency Fine

Converting to Harrisons

  • Consult with an avian veterinarian before any diet change and annually thereafter.
  • Mix Harrison's with your bird's current diet and note acceptance.
  • If your bird needs more time, taper amount given over four weeks, increasing Harrison's by 25% each week (reducing other food by 25%) until you can safely remove the previous food altogether.
  • If needed, scatter Harrison'snuggets over white paper or a mirror on the floor of the enclosure.

Harrison's has additional conversion materials free of charge.

refrigerator

Storage and Shelf Life

Harrison's is committed to protecting your bird from artificial preservatives. Here are some suggestions to keep your food fresh without preservatives:

  • Squeeze all air out of the bag and zip it shut at the top.
  • If the zip lock gets removed or damaged, fold the top over several times and close with a clip.
  • Keep food in original bag. Do not repackage into plastic bags or containers.
  • Use contents within 8 weeks of opening bag.
  • Purchase Harrison's foods only in their original packaging.
  • Refrigeration or freezing after opening may help maintain freshness.

Additional concerns

pecentages

Other Foods

A bird's daily diet should be 75-80% Harrison's Bird Foods, 15-20% organic dark green leafy or dark yellow meaty vegetables and fruits (including sweet potatoes, carrots, pumpkin, winter squash, broccoli, parsley, spinach, mango or papaya) and 5% omega-rich seeds and nuts (flax, chia, perilla, or JUMPSTART Omega).

Do not offer vitamins unless directed by your avian veterinarian. Do not use other formulated diets in conjunction with Harrison's or you could reduce the benefits.

Exercise your bird

Exercise

Recent research has shown that a lack of exercise is a primary factor in the development of diseases, especially atherosclerosis. This appears to be a condition that is present in all captive parrots to some degree and worsens with age.

There are a few ways a family can ensure that a pet bird has access to exercise:

• Free-flying would be the ultimate exercise, but there are potential associated risks, such as escape or encountering household dangers

• Housing in a large enough enclosure to allow free flight

• Placing a harness or leash on the bird and have it tethered to an outdoor line under constant observation

• Placing a ladder inside the enclosure to encourage movement

• Providing safe environmental enrichment activities

• Offering daily time for the bird to move around outside the enclosure with supervision

sunlight

Sunlight

Access to sunlight is essential for activation of vitamin D and utilization of calcium in the body. For example, African grey parrots, whose natural living conditions are high in the jungle canopy, require an abundance of sunlight in captivity to activate dietary calcium.

There are several ways access to sunlight can be accomplished for pet birds:

• One may expose the bird in its cage or other safe enclosure to outdoor fresh air and direct sunlight for short periods of time. There should be shade available for the bird to retreat.

• Putting a cage in front of a sunny window does not accomplish the same thing. The glass itself prevents transfer of the proper rays.

• In areas or seasons where there is little direct sun, recommended lamps with sufficient UVA and UVB lights may be used to simulate sun rays.


Jewell Davies
2025-09-01 10:13:27
We just recently adopted a new cockatiel who was sadly not in the best condition. Missing a lot of feathers on his stomach area and along his shoulders. Poor baby looked scrawny and a bit bedraggeled. I started adding this to his fresh vegetables and seed mixture. His feathers have started coming in and his appetite is back. They are small pellets and easy for him to eat. They smell fresh and were not stale or mushy, but good and crunchy. They arrived in good condition. My other male cockatiel eats the Harrison's ultra fine in the green bag. Regular potency and he loves it. I know some birds don't care for it at first, but it can be introduced slowly with the other items you're already feeding. My first guy has beautiful feathers and along with fresh vegetables and the Harrison's his diet has kept him healthy and happy. I would definitely recommend this product (along with love and care) for your birds! My new guy is coming along much better now.
AZDOVE
2025-08-23 20:21:48
Easily transitioned my birds over to this (Including my picky cockatiel 😁). I love the size because I also give this to my white wing dove that I rescued and she is handicapped and also needs smaller food (she stayed small and has digestive/crop issues. This food has seemed to help.) The quality is great-low dust, not a lot of broken pieces. BOTH of my birds health has improved. My cockatiels was drastic. Both my parents were sick and passed in a couple of years here at home and he took it hard. (I'm sure because he was feeling me 🫠). But he gained some much needed weight and his feathers look better! And the happy chatter! He likes to supervise and instruct the covering and uncovering of his cage every day 😆😂🤣😅 It's PRECIOUS. Cause it's all in his own language except for a few words 😂. I do of course supplement with seed, treats, supplements, greens etc. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND this bird food 👌 😉
d_nice
2025-08-01 18:28:50
Harrison's organic pellets (whether High Potency or Adult Lifetime) are probably THE healthiest and overall best possible main food source for captive parrots/birds. No need to worry about the eventual effects of dyes, pesticides or other nasty chemicals that can harm your bird.Let me just say though... if you have a parrot who has been living off an all-seed / seed mix diet, he or she will in all likelihood NOT like this food right away. The number one most likely reason: SUGAR. Sugar is proven to be, at least in humans, a MOOD-ALTERING SUBSTANCE, like white flour and caffeine. I say, why would it be much different for parrots? My theory is that parrots can be addicted and develop a tolerance for sugar just like we humans can. Thankfully, Harrison's organic pellets, unlike MANY other 'healthy' pellet brands, have NO added sugar.So, like I said, let's say you own a parrot who has been living off a high-fat, high-sugar diet. The best method of diet conversion, in my humble opinion, is GRADUAL. If you just replace the seed mix or whatever crap your poor bird has been eating with something as healthy and wholesome as Harrison's, he or she is just going to turn up his or her nose because he or she WILL NOT PERCEIVE THE PELLETS AS FOOD. Some birds will actually be AFRAID of that weird new stuff you put in his or her food bowl. So, how can you change your parrot's perception in order for him or her to see Harrison's, or any pellet for that matter, as food?Well, put simply, you can't. BUT... there are some sneaky, creative ways to get your parrot to try pellets. There are a few different ways you can do this. Whichever method you choose, it will require a great deal of PATIENCE, so keep that in mind.***Step 1***Figure out, as accurately as you can, exactly how much food your bird goes through in one day, if you haven't done so already. You need to know the amount so you can control the proportions of seeds to pellets (more on that momentarily). Notice I said 'how much food your bird GOES THROUGH' rather than 'how much your bird eats'. I say that because we need to also include how much food the bird wastes, say, by dropping pieces of food that fall through the bars at the bottom of the cage. And if you know anything about birds, you are well aware that there is always a LOT of waste. :)(Note: In order to get an accurate measurement, it's best to have TWO separate cages for your bird: one for daytime, and one for nighttime (sleep cage). And don't put any food in the nighttime cage. That way, your bird won't be consuming food you don't know about during the night, in the early morning while you're still sleeping, etc. Also note: this is NOT cruel in any way. In the wild, parrots do not eat during their sleeping hours. From my own personal research, I have found it's best to mimic natural conditions as accurately as possible in order to ensure the best possible health for your bird.)You can find this number by first measuring how much you approximately put in the food dish daily. At this point, I'm assuming that there is plenty of food left over in the dish at the end of the day. Depending on the size of your bird, gradually decrease the (measured) amount, day by day, or week by week if necessary, until you come to an amount that leaves the dish pretty much empty at the end of the day, or at the very least, empty with the exception of the pieces of the 'seed mix' that your parrot doesn't eat. If you own a small bird, such as a budgie (parakeet) or a cockatiel, you might want to decrease the daily amount in increments of 1 or 1/2 tsp at a time.***Step 2***Selecting a pellet size appropriate for your bird's size and your bird's personal preferences ("Fine" is appropriate for cockatiels and other birds similar in size... though some budgies might prefer the slightly smaller "super fine"). As this brand recommends, start off with the High Potency type; major diet changes are generally stressful for birds, and therefore they need higher amounts of nutrients during these times, also during molting, etc. (Once your bird is 'converted' to Harrison's High Potency, it should be quite easy to convert to Adult Lifetime since the ingredients are so similar; there shouldn't be much if any difference in taste or texture.)Okay, now that that's out of the way... THE METHODS. In each of these examples, I'm going to use my rescued cockatiel Louie for examples.***Method #1: Gradual Proportion Changes***Let's say that I just rescued Louie from his abusive 'home' back in 2011, and he goes through about 8 tsp. of 'seed mix' per day, including the pieces he doesn't touch. For the first week, I will replace 1 tsp. of the seed mix with Harrison's High Potency Fine pellets, and mix it all up. For week 2, I will replace another 1 tsp. of the seed mix with the pellets, totaling 2 tsp. of pellets and 6 tsp. of seed mix. By this time, Louie has likely tried the pellet by accident, and finds the taste to be rather bland, so he doesn't eat them; he prefers his high-fat seeds and high-sugar brightly colored fun-shaped 'pellets' (you know which pieces I'm talking about; my guess is they're made from wheat, corn, and high fructose corn syrup). But as week 3 starts to go by, with 3 tsp. of pellets and 5 tsp. of seed mix, Louie is starting to get hungrier and hungrier after all his favorite pieces of the seed mix are gone, so at the end of the day, he eats a few pellets here and there, even if they are bland, just to satisfy his hunger. Obviously, I continue like this until there is only 1 tsp of seed mix left on week 7, and finally, just pellets at the beginning of week 8 and afterward.But let's say Louie was even pickier and refused to try the pellets, even when there was only, say, 5 tsp. of seed mix left, and he was quite hungry. Here's where we need to get a bit more creative.***Method #2: Gradual Proportion Changes: CRUSHED***For this method, if Louie's 'seed mix' has those sugary colorful fun-shaped 'pellets' I talked about, then we're going to take the tedious time to separate these from the rest of the mix. I crush up the Harrison's pellets and the sugary 'pellets' TOGETHER, in a small food processor/blender or what have you, in a proportion of, say, 3/4 sugar pellets and 1/4 Harrison's. Then, I mix the crushed pellets with the seeds, putting the proper measurement in Louie's food bowl. Do this for a week. If Louie likes the sugary pellets, then he will likely not notice much difference in the taste of them crushed up. And he WILL taste them, likely while searching for millet at the bottom of the bowl. The following week, I increase the proportion of the crushed pellets to the seeds, so that there are more pellets this time. I do this for a week. The following week, I change the proportion of the sugary 'pellets' to Harrison's again, this time making it half and half. It's obvious by now where I'm going with this. Keep reducing the seed, increasing the pellets, and increasing the proportion of Harrison's to gradually reduce the amount of sugar until there is no added sugar at all, and he is eating only crushed Harrison's. After that, you can start introducing a small proportion of the Harrison's pellet in its whole form. It's likely that Louie will appreciate the opportunity to crush the pellet in his beak rather than picking and picking bit by bit for tiny crumbs.Uh-oh, but what if even THAT doesn't work? What if Louie's seed mix has none of those sugary 'pellets' with which to do this method?***Method #3: Pellet Bundles***This method involves captive foraging. If you're already doing this for your bird, wonderful. But most people unfortunately do not, to the detriment of their bird's health and behavior. For the first week, instead of just pouring the correctly measured amount of seed mix in Louie's food dish, this is what I do: I grab some coffee filters and some scissors, cut the filters up into pieces (4 or 6 pieces depending on the size of the filter), and measure out about 1/2 tsp. of seed mix, placing it on the piece of coffee filter. Then, I carefully (so it doesn't rip) wrap up the food within the filter, gently twisting the ends together. What I have now is a seed/food bundle. I make maybe 2-4 of them and put the rest of the food as I normally do in the bowl. Then I poke a few holes in the food bundles so that Louie will be able to see that there's food inside, and then put the food bundles in to the dish for the day. I do this for about a week or until Louie is accustomed to seeing the food bundles. Gradually work up to all of the food being in food bundles. If Louie eats about 8 tsp. of seed mix per day, then I will need about 16 half-teaspoon food bundles. Eventually, I stop poking holes in the food bundles, that way Louie has to bite into them himself to get to his food.Finally, once he's used to foraging like that, I essentially begin with Method #1: gradually changing the proportions of seeds to pellets. The pellets can be whole, or ground up if you feel the need to be even sneakier about it. This method, in my humble opinion, is the most effective because when he bites into the food bundle, HE CAN'T SEE THE FOOD. So he's going to be accidentally tasting the pellets more and more. And of course, eventually the food/seed bundles will be PELLET BUNDLES.CONCLUSION: Diet conversion is hard, but it can be done with patience and the right approach. All that aside, once your parrot/bird is on Harrison's organic pellets as his or her main food source for good, especially after changing from a seed mix diet, you should notice substantially good changes in his or her behavior, but most importantly, his/her HEALTH! I can say with great confidence that my cockatiel Louie will be with me for many years to come, all because he is on the proper diet! (A cockatiel that eats a healthy, wholesome diet his/her whole life and is cared for properly can live to be in his/her late 20s! But sadly, most parrots are fed seeds their whole lives, and as a result will only live out a tiny fraction of their proper lifespans.)I HIGHLY recommend Harrison's organic pellets to anyone who wants to improve their bird's quality of life. A proper diet is CRUCIAL to the well-being of any bird! (Note: As healthy and great as this pellet brand is, though, you should still supplement with veggies and fruits!)Enjoy your fids, bird-lovers! :)("fids" = feathered kids)
Customer
2025-07-13 11:52:40
My conure parrot loves the taste of this food. He is a finicky eater, and I have tried so many different brands, but this is the one that he loves the most.
Geraris Melendez
2025-07-11 10:05:53
Super good quality, packed well. My bird love it. Save me the trip to the Vet .
hannah eilers
2025-07-07 13:22:47
My birds pick this out of their pellet mix as a favorite, but sadly it's a little cost prohibitive to buy all the time. Arrived smelling fresh and seems to be great quality.
Ivy Majpruz-Moat
2025-07-05 11:13:19
These pellets are high quality and perfect for pet birds to help keep them healthy.
willow
2025-06-25 19:01:14
The quality of Harrisons's is well understood. The fact that our yellow sided green cheek conure loves it is a big plus- a real relief that she is eating nutritious food. Without complaint. I can recommend this product.
Steven
2025-05-05 12:49:35
The best high quality parrot food. Accepted by all my 5 birds. Highly recommended
Jason Duque
2025-03-12 14:57:17
My Love Birds Love it!!!!
Houston78
2024-12-21 10:46:27
Happy bird, happy owner.