Hookturn wrote:I do work outside the house. JJ is usually by himself for about 5 hours 3 days a week. Again he didn't show any of the signs you spoke of (except for flight of course) until he started losing weight.
From what I've read and heard, birds are very good at disguising illness. I've also read that weight is many times the only way to tell if they're sick. I imagine you're the exception and as it can only lead to earlier treatment in many cases it seems to me that weighing them should be part of everyone's daily routine.
Yes, they are certainly VERY good at hiding symptoms and weight loss is definitely a way of realizing they are sick. My issue with doing it every day been that people will misinterpret readings and reduce or add food when they shouldn't (have you seen the posting on this person who keeps his bird's weight low and exactly the same all year round by counting the number of pellets he serves?). But I am not the exception. It's like everything else, a matter of quantity and length of exposure and just good memory and putting two and two together. I've had birds my entire life and have been taking in parrots for 22 year so I've not only taught myself to look carefully for the signs and to 'see' when I look. And I've learned the hard way. One morning, about 6 years ago, I saw Cowboy (17 year old female Senegal) fluffing up and going to sleep right after breakfast and, although I wondered at it and made a mental note to check on her, when the evening came and she came flying for her dinner, I watched her eat, touched her chest to ascertain she was in good weight (she was) and dismissed the whole thing as a false alarm. The next morning I found her dead. This bird was in perfect plumage and weight. She did not have any discharge from anywhere, no labored breathing, no tail bob, good appetite, good poop, etc and the ONLY thing different had been that single morning nap. But, when my AV opened her up for the necropsy, she called me to come over to her house and see. She was a mess inside, the poor thing! All her internal organs had been greatly compromised (enlarged, discolored, etc). When we sent tissue samples out to ran cultures on them, it came back positive for psittacosis (this is when I had the epidemic in my birdroom brought in by a sick cockatiel that I had taken in from a bird rescue in upstate NY which was closing down). If you look at 99% of the sites where they describe psittacosis, you will find that they don't tell you that death can occur without almost any symptoms but I now know it does.