Chester decides the eggs needed to be brooded, and spends a few minutes neurotically rolling them around on the table, trying to mount them. I guess it never occured to her that the egg was the size of her whole body. Meanwhile, Sunny has decided that the pellets really shouldn’t go into the bread. She drags the bag off and pushes it off the table, victoriously eyeing the floor as pellets scatter.
Quickly I add the ingredients to the bowl, hoping to get them all in before I lose an egg or a jar of baby food. Sunny hops up onto the side of the bowl and chirps loudly, criticizing my stirring technique. Chester’s eyes get as wide as saucers when she sees that I’ve cracked the egg. She runs over to the bowl, screams at me, and then proceeds to knock the jar of cayenne pepper over and track it all over the table.
I have decided to make two batches – one veggie-flavored, and one fruit-flavored. As I’m spreading the veggie batch into the cake pan, Sunny jumps down and runs over to the other bowl. She decides that baby food is the best thing she’s ever tasted, and then decides it looks better plastered on the walls, table, and her face than in the bowl.
Finally, I can mix the other batch and put the first one in the oven. I try to put the second batch in the refrigerator while the first is cooking, but Sunny won’t have any of that. She flies down to the bowl which is now sitting on the top shelf in the refrigerator, and refuses to leave it. Each time I reach in to get her, she hisses and Chester nips me in the ear. Finally I get her out, but not without a dirty look.
I set the timer on the microwave, and both birds are at full attention. Twenty minutes later, the timer goes off, and both birds immediately fly back out to the kitchen. One might think we’ve been through this before. Now it’s a struggle to keep them out of the hot pan of bread while I cut a few pieces to pacify them. Again, I crumble the pieces into their bowls and pop them in the freezer for a quick cool down. Chester is supervising this, and believes that she needs the bread right this very second, nipping me every time I check the bowls and find the bread still too hot.
Finally, I’m able to give them the bread. As I’m carrying the bowls back to their cage, both birds are skating down my arms again and are diving headfirst into the bread before I can get it into the cage. They spend the next ten minutes throwing out the pellet chunks they find and trading bowls to see who got the most peas. After a while, the frenzy dies down, and my two snuggle bugs are back, crops full, feathers fluffed, contentedly grinding their beaks. At least someone appreciates my cooking!