by JimH » Sat Sep 14, 2013 11:20 pm
That's what we did first. This had gone on for a while before the vet decided to clip. Things seemed to be getting better but then after one of Bishop's evening flying marathons he landed, panted heavily, woobled all over, and nearly fainted. I thought my bird was having a heart attack. Took him to the on-call vet at the office, who was a recent grad. She had no idea what happened but said he was fine on exam. The next day he attempted another fly but cut it short and landed on the floor, dizzy and panting again. Went to my regular vet and after an exam and tests he said the infection had returned. We tried the process again with more or less the same outcome.
Bishop only flies for two reasons: to come to me when called and for his crazy evening routine. Attempts to discourage or disrupt the evening fly didn't work, so based on my info about Bishop, we tried the clip. He tried his evening fly once and saw it was a no-go. He hasn't tried since, but instead spontaneously tries to fly over to me at some point in the evening without being called, or if he's with me already, he'll suddenly try to fly to his cage--an apparent shorter replacement for his old routine. Since I posted my original message he has actually stopped trying to fly at all, which is what I thought/hoped he would do based on other things I've observed in him. Hopefully he'll get the rest he needs to heal and will be ready to fly when his feathers grow back. Given his apparent willingness to just quit trying, it will be interesting to see if he figures out on his own when he can fly again.