"GB" is a Chaco Blue-fronted Amazon parrot.
Quite sure she's a hen, never DNA tested though. When I got her she had an open leg band with a USDA quarantine facility number... so I'm suspecting her age to be 20-30, and I'm suspecting that she is a wild-caught import. (correct me if that's a poor assumption)
She has quite the story, but the short version is that she was abandoned in a cardboard box and my vet ended up inheriting her. He already had several birds and no spare cage, so he brought her to the clinic and adopted her out... to me, as it turned out.
She had plucked her feathers out, wheezed when she breathed, was skinny, unsocialized, and very rarely made noise - but when she did, they were very unpleasant noises (crying, creaking doors, and something that sounds like a child getting beaten).
I've had her for a while, her feathers have come back, she rarely wheezes anymore, and she seems happier but I do not think that she has gained any weight - and in fact, she may have even lost some. Her keel bone is very prominent from sight alone, and she is VERY finicky.
I've tried a few different diets... I offered her some pellet-berries and later nutri-berries, which she refuses to touch. She would rather starve herself, it seems. I currently give her a seed/nut/fruit/veggie mix with a large variety. It seems like I'm wasting it... I can't determine one ingredient that looks like she eats it willingly.
Of course, every time I eat I offer her whatever it is I happen to be eating in the hopes that she will get some more calories ingested... she DOES like oatmeal, brown rice, apples, peanuts, and pistachios. She tried some turkey today, as well.
Does someone have any advice on how to put weight on a depressed, pessimistic, finicky rescue bird? I would LOVE to be able to get her on a balanced diet, but at this point I would just be happy with calories.
Also, side-questions: the wheezing had me worried initially, but she has had two full exams from my vet since I have gotten her (one upon adoption, another two or three months later) and the vet keeps telling me that everything is clear and clean and that she "looks" good. She is very wild and so attempting to administer oral antibiotics just in case might do more harm from the stress, than good. I am curious if the wheezing could be an effect of being exposed to something like cigarette smoke over a long period of time. I have an air purifier in her room and she quite rarely wheezes anymore - but sometimes I hear it, and I don't like it.
Second side-question: she makes a faint, high-pitched whistle, like a straining noise, when she poops. She always gets the job done, but she seems constipated. Advice, experience on that one?
A lot of questions, I'm sorry, but I want to help her to the best of my ability. My macaw is happy, healthy, and sassy and I would like her to be able to be so someday, too.
Thank you so much!




