Description of all colors including cinammons.
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The Cinnamon Budgie: Cinnamon Budgies can have any body color. What makes them unique is their cinnamon brown markings on the wings where most other budgies are black. Often times the body color of the Cinnamon appears washed out. There are 11 Cinnamon Variations - Cinnamon, Cinnamon Olive Green, Cinnamon Light Green, Cinnamon Dark Green, Cinnamon Grey Green, Cinnamon Grey, Cinnamon Skyblue, Cinnamon Mauve, Cinnamon Cobalt, Cinnamon Violet, and Cinnamon Light Yellow. All Cinnamon Budgies have purple cheek patches with the exception of the Cinnamon Grey, whose cheek patches are slate to gray colored. They will all have three cinnamon brown throat spots as well. All Cinnamon Budgie colors are muted 50% from those of non-Cinnamon Budgies. The standard Cinnamon budgie can come in an array of muted colors, his mask, body, and tail feather colors depends on the 'base' color. The Cinnamon Olive Green has a yellow face mask with a muted olive green body. His tail feathers are dark blue with a touch of brown. The Cinnamon Light Green and Dark Green varieties both have yellow face masks with tail feathers identical to the Olive except a little lighter. They both have muted grass green bodies. The Cinnamon Grey Green has a white face mask, muted green-green body, and cinnamon brown tail. The Cinnamon Grey is the same as the Cinnamon Grey green except his body lacks the green and is seen only in muted green. The Cinnamon Skyblue has a white facemask, bluish-cinnamon-brown tail and muted skyblue body. The Cinnamon Mauve also has a white face mask, but his tail feathers and body exist in a mute purple-color. A touch of brown can also be seen in the tail feathers. The Cinnamon Cobalt is much the same as the Skyblue and Mauve, except his body and tail feathers are colored by a muted cobalt blue. The Cinnamon Violet has a white face mask, with a striking muted violet body color. His tail is a pale cinnamon brown. The last variation is the Cinnamon Light Yellow. His face mask is buttercup yellow, and his body is a muted buttercup yellow. His wings and back are cinnamon brown. The tail feathers are the same as the body, but lighter, with a touch of cinnamon brown. This mutation was first noted in Australia, Germany and England in the early to mud 1930's.
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