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What is wrong with our bird?

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What is wrong with our bird?

Postby love2learn4u » Thu Apr 30, 2020 11:59 pm

Has anyone seen this before before? Our Green Cheek is about 8-9 weeks old. This behavior is becoming more frequent. She normally will stop when we approach her cage. Sometimes her wing will even come out of the bars, which concerns us.

Any thoughts?

https://youtu.be/8fNiiLtnlh4
love2learn4u
Parakeet
 
Gender: This parrot forum member is female
Posts: 3
Number of Birds Owned: 1
Types of Birds Owned: Green Cheek Conjure
Flight: No

Re: What is wrong with our bird?

Postby Pajarita » Fri May 01, 2020 9:06 am

Welcome to the forum. No, I've never seen behavior like that and it is definitely not a normal thing... Now, an up and down movement (which is kind of what she is doing by pushing out with her legs that way) is typical of baby birds asking for food - only it's done when they are standing up (actually, they kind of crouch a bit) and not hanging that way from the bars. Is this bird been fed correctly? Soft foods served fresh and warm twice a day, two handfeedings a day (dawn and dusk)? Is she being let out for many hours a day and given 4 + hours of one-on-one?

I would be concerned, too, if she was my bird. She is not only messing up her plumage (although I noticed that she is clipped which is very unhealthy for all birds but especially bad for babies because they not only get their respiratory system atrophied, they never develop the necessary neural paths they do when they fly and, once you miss that window, you are pretty much screwed), she could easily break a wing... What do you do when she does that? Do you let her out of her cage and put her on you? Because, if she is being fed correctly and not hungry, she must be looking for company -babies need A LOT of hours of one-on-one and she is a little baby.

Also, I strongly suggest you rethink the cage because the one she has is not good for her. She needs a flight cage (MUCH bigger).
Pajarita
Norwegian Blue
 
Gender: This parrot forum member is female
Posts: 18604
Location: NW Pa
Number of Birds Owned: 30
Types of Birds Owned: RoseBreasted too, CAG, DoubleYellowHead Amazon, BlueFront Amazon, YellowNape Amazon, Senegal, African Redbelly, Quaker, Sun Conure, Nanday, BlackCap Caique, WhiteBelly Caique, PeachFace lovebird, budgies,
Flight: Yes

Re: What is wrong with our bird?

Postby love2learn4u » Sun May 03, 2020 7:42 pm

She is having 2 hand feedings a day (dawn and dusk). We offer her warm green greens, corn, and peas multiple times daily, but she shows little interest. She plays around with the peas. We've "squeezed" them to try to show her there is food. The breeder recommended trying baby food, so we give her 10 ml of mixed veg baby food as one of her feedings. She has Zupreem pellets available at all times in her cage. She eats the pellets fine it seems. We see her eating them. She is out of her cage more than she's in her cage during the day. We take her back to her cage while she's out every so often and say "potty." A lot of the times, she's potties as soon as she's taken to her cage. We'll leave her in the cage for a while if she starts to eat the pellets. She out of the cage MUCH more than 4 hours each day. She likes to sit on shoulders, cuddle, and play.

What tips do you have to increase her interest in fresh foods?

We've started to cover her cage the last few days when she starts this behavior and she usually stops it. Maybe she is just wanting out of the cage when it happens. We cover the cage and after the behavior stops, we go ahead and get her out. So, hopefully, we're not reinforcing a behavior we're wanting to stop. It seems to have been much less of a problem since we started covering the cage.

She is clipped. We always clipped our birds when I was a child, so we didn't even consider her not being clipped. The breeder clipped her for us. It seems a lot has changed since I was a kid, though.

I'd be interested in hearing more about not clipping her wings in the future. She can still fly really well, so hopefully her development won't be affected.

How do you prevent your birds from flying out the door? We have a large family, a lot of children, and a lot of our kids' friends in and out (under normal non-quarantining times). Our nieces and nephews live a couple doors down and they're in and out, too. It's a very active household. What is your advice?

We have a flight cage on order. This cage was only intended for the first couple weeks we have her. We planned to use this cage in our camper. We're only ever gone 2 nights. Do you think it's o.k. for that purpose?

Thank you for your help!
love2learn4u
Parakeet
 
Gender: This parrot forum member is female
Posts: 3
Number of Birds Owned: 1
Types of Birds Owned: Green Cheek Conjure
Flight: No

Re: What is wrong with our bird?

Postby Pajarita » Mon May 04, 2020 8:52 am

Well, not being there to observe the bird it's always hard to say what the problem is but, going by what I know, I would say it's hungry. For one thing, the soft food you are offering is not good for a baby bird and you should never replace the formula with just pureed veggies/fruits. I have no idea why the breeder would say such a thing unless it's somebody who doesn't know enough because you never feed a baby bird a food without protein and carbs in it - it's like giving a 6 month old baby half the daily bottles with just juice in them - that baby is not going to gain weight. Have you been weighing the baby daily and keeping track of its weight? Because, if you haven't, you need to start doing it to make sure it's not losing weight. It needs two or three good feedings of formula (and make sure it's not liquidy, too - it needs to be creamy) and, what you should do is replace some of the water in the formula with pureed fruits. Don't misunderstand me, these birds are mainly fruit eaters in the wild and do need a lot of produce BUT they also need protein and carbs, especially the babies. So, yes, you do need to offer foods that have veggies and/or fruits but it also needs to have grains. Try gloop, Irish oatmeal, whole grain cous cous, whole grain pastina, polenta - stuff like that. Cook it and mix it with things like mashed sweet potatoes, bananas, grated apples, etc. You can use baby jars but do not use the ones that have cereal in them (birds should never consume any cereal that has been prepared for human consumption because they all have too much iron added to them) or the ones with spinach (again, too much iron). Give it two good handfeedings (dawn and dusk) and offer two kinds of soft food served warm and fresh twice a day. Also, put some millet in her cage, too - it's a nice, soft, small seed that they like a lot and it has carbs and low protein - perfect for a baby. As to feeding her Zupreem pellets... well, for one thing I do hope they are not the colored ones which are, without exception, the worst food you can give a parrot (lots and lots of bad things in them). I do not recommend anybody feeds pellets to any bird except maybe chickens but, if you have your heart set on pellets, at least get Tops and wet them before you serve them (pellets are a max of 10% moisture while parrots natural diets are 85 - 95% moisture).

It is very unfortunate that you clipped such a young bird...but, if she can still fly, it should be OK because when they are clipped before they learn, they never develop all the necessary neural paths in her brain and will never fly well. One of my GCCs was clipped as a baby and kept clipped until she came to me at 18 months of age and even though she can fly after a fashion, she only does it when she has no other choice and very badly at that. As to how to keep a bird from flying off the door... well, I have buffer zones: porch for the front door and mud room for the back - but I don't have children going in and out, either and I am a maniac when it comes to opening the doors when they are out flying (it's pretty much forbidden in my house). If you do not have buffer zones, I suggest you keep her in a room that has no 'outside' door in it so, if she does fly through the door, she will end up just in another room. I also suggest you get those magnet screens for the doors that close by themselves once the person went through and a sign on the door to the room where she is kept saying something like :BIRD IS OUT - DO NOT OPEN DOOR!

Also, please, NEVER cover a bird's cage during the day - NEVER NEVER NEVER. I know that this is something that people used to do but we have learned a lot since those times and we now know it's bad for them. Let me explain. Birds are all photoperiodic (research avian photoperiodism, avian endocrine system and avian reproductive system) and depend on the quality and amount of daylight hours to set their internal clock that governs their endocrine system (the light of dawn turns on the 'stop watch', the light of dusk turns it off). When you cover a cage during the day, you are interrupting the 'workings of the clock' and messing things up. Birds know when to eat (dawn and dusk), when to rest (noon), when to breed, when to molt, when to migrate, etc based on the light they receive during the day (research circadian and circannual cycles) so in order to keep them healthy and happy (lack of light depresses them) they need to be kept at a strict solar schedule with full exposure (two hours) of dawn and dusk (without any artificial lights on before the sunshine is streaming into the room or after the sun is halfway down to the horizon in the afternoon). So, when you cover the cage in the middle of the day, you are messing up the circadian cycle and confusing its body.

Also, please do not try to potty train it. It's extremely harmful to birds which have a super fast metabolism and need to poop every few minutes (little birds do it every 20 minutes during the am). Birds pee and poop in one single deposition and when you train them to 'hold' it, you are creating a situation that nature never considered and there are a lot of birds that end up with cloacal prolapse because of it. Parrots are not dogs and should never be housebroken but even if they were like dogs, even adult little dogs cannot hold it for more than a few hours at a time (and that's why toy breeds are usually trained to go on a wee wee pad). Birds do poop all over the place but this is part of living with a parrot. I have plastic covers on all my tables and old quilts and bedspreads covering my sofas and chairs which get changed and laundered every couple of days and I just scrape the poop off the floor, moldings, etc, mist with a spray bottle, wait a few minutes and then mop or wipe. It's a bit more work but this way, my furniture is 'saved', my house is clean and my birds are healthy.

Living with a bird means making A LOT of changes to our 'normal' lifestyles... people see them small and think that because they 'live' in a cage they are low maintenance but, in reality, they are super high maintenance and, in all honesty, I find it's less work to have 20 dogs or 40 cats than two parrots :lol: For one thing, with dogs and cats only I would be able to go on vacations, receive people in the winter evenings and go visit relatives that live far away often - all things I cannot do because of the parrots...
Pajarita
Norwegian Blue
 
Gender: This parrot forum member is female
Posts: 18604
Location: NW Pa
Number of Birds Owned: 30
Types of Birds Owned: RoseBreasted too, CAG, DoubleYellowHead Amazon, BlueFront Amazon, YellowNape Amazon, Senegal, African Redbelly, Quaker, Sun Conure, Nanday, BlackCap Caique, WhiteBelly Caique, PeachFace lovebird, budgies,
Flight: Yes

Re: What is wrong with our bird?

Postby love2learn4u » Mon May 04, 2020 6:54 pm

We have not been weighing her, something the breeder never mentioned. The breeder said she was practically weaned.... oh my. We are going to get a scale tonight. Thank you for your advice! We will definitely be implementing your suggestions! We thought we weren't going into this uneducated, but at the moment we feel ill prepared. So much has changed since my dad and I had a bird years and year ago growing up. Seed, water, and cleaning the cage. We'd feed vegetables and fruit, too, but not as the main diet. One thing is for certain, we do love this little baby. She has the sweetest personality and she's with a human throughout most of the day and early evening. We will make some changes and I'll continue to read this forum. Thank you very much!
love2learn4u
Parakeet
 
Gender: This parrot forum member is female
Posts: 3
Number of Birds Owned: 1
Types of Birds Owned: Green Cheek Conjure
Flight: No

Re: What is wrong with our bird?

Postby Pajarita » Tue May 05, 2020 8:38 am

Please do not feel guilty or even bad about not knowing. The truth of the matter is that we are all flying blind when it comes to keeping parrots as pets. Humans might have started thousands of years ago to cage them but we've only began to scratch the surface of the tip of the iceberg in bird knowledge about 20 to 25 years ago. We have learned a lot since then but we still have a looooong way to go. And we all made mistakes - ALL OF US! (I use to feed my birds crap when I first started rescuing) - and we will continue to make them because, again, we still do not know enough. And, to put the icing on the cake of our failures, we have to deal with a pet industry that is super powerful and makes it very difficult for us to learn because you will not find a single breeder or pet owner/employee that tells you the truth of how difficult it is to keep them healthy and happy -if they even know themselves.

There are only three conditions that a good parrot keeper must have: love for the bird, the willingness to learn and to make changes to our life and husbandry for the rest of the bird's life.
Pajarita
Norwegian Blue
 
Gender: This parrot forum member is female
Posts: 18604
Location: NW Pa
Number of Birds Owned: 30
Types of Birds Owned: RoseBreasted too, CAG, DoubleYellowHead Amazon, BlueFront Amazon, YellowNape Amazon, Senegal, African Redbelly, Quaker, Sun Conure, Nanday, BlackCap Caique, WhiteBelly Caique, PeachFace lovebird, budgies,
Flight: Yes


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