friend2parrots wrote:i don;t have much experience with feather-plucking in any of the birds I have kept over the years, but tehere is something significant i would like to share with you re: my Gcc Ringo. You know as I mentioned before he went through that stressful episode watching the roadwork from his window 6 months ago. well, for a full week after that he was a neurotic mess - a nonstop 14-hour a day plucker. but here's the funny thing - he didn't pluck his feathers - he plucked his favorite toy, made of cotton rope, that he always used to cuddle with right before jumping in his happy hut for bed. this made me think that maybe feather plucking is a stress reaction, and that somehow, thankfully, my bird had decided to pluck his toy instead of himself.
I don't know how Ollie and Harlie are with their toys - do they have a favorite preening toy, a kind of soft type of toy, that they touch with their beak regularly? I know all birds are different, but maybe you could bring such a toy closer to them to distract them, but still enable them to exericise the activity of preening/plucking. as a temporary measure while your waiting for the vet to contact you.
soorry I have to run now but I will think about this further and get back to you.
Honestly I am open to any ideas whatsoever, new and old, if I have heard ideas before and am already putting those things into practice then that helps me out, if all it does is reassure me that I'm not doing a terrible job at looking after them than that helps too. I must admit there are no preening type toys in their cages at the moment, but there are plenty of shredding/destroying etc type toys- soft woods, vines, leather, shredded paper in a ball. I tend to steer clear of putting anything "stringy" in their cages for safety reasons but you have just given me a couple of ideas I hadn't thought of like cutting up some fabric they cannot get caught up in and fastening it together.
As far as I know there hasn't been any disturbances, we live in a very quiet area and the pets are very rarely alone for any length of time, when I'm not in my bf is and vice versa so in theory we would know if there had been any problems. This past week and a half I can say with certainty that nothing has happened as there has always been someone at home. Apart from that Ollie is the most stupidly fearless bird, almost literally nothing frightens him although he can be cautious of new things, doesn't matter of theres fireworks, if I drop something, drilling upstairs, new animals about, he really couldn't care less. That said I'm sure there is stuff that can frighten him, theres just been nothing new that could have triggered it, im pretty confident of that, although wouldn't discount the idea.