Friday, November 5, 2010

I know, it's been an age! Been busy with both work and life, but I'm going to start sneaking in my camera to work, and updated a bit more regularly! 

So, here's a few of my current Bird residents:   


 A cute budgie!


Scaly and a musk lorikeet


 

Lutino (yellow) Scaly lorikeet 


Kakariki group - from left to right: Cinnamon red-crowned pied, normal red-crowned pied, normal yellow-crowned pied, normal red-crowned.  


Yellow-crowned pied hen ready to launch off the perch. 


Red-crowned pied male showing off! 



Tiel group from left to right: cinnamon pearl, cinnamon pied, whiteface pied, and two cinnamon whiteface pieds. 


Two whiteface cinnamon pieds cuddling on the swing! 


I've just gotten a bunch of new handraised birds in, so I'm going to have a big photo session, keep your eyes out! 


Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Summer approaches

Sunny, the lutino scaly lorikeet, and her sun conure buddies, enjoying a small tidal wave, er, bath!







Friday, October 16, 2009

Some Updates and Videos

It's been a fun week. Princess and the conures all found new homes! And we're overflowing with new birds, keeping me busy but content. We've got four lovely whiteface cockatiels, but I'm sure some of those will have sold by the time I go back to work on Sunday. Two more sun conures, big bold Taxi and shy little Roxie have arrived! And we have someone very special, a little cutie of a moustache parrot called Cub - because he's just like a baby teddy bear! Sunny the lutino scaly's still with us, as is Rascal, the normal green scaly.

Here's a quick video of some cockatiels and conures having fun during playtime!





The busiest time of year for handraised birds is yet to come - within a few weeks, we'll have galahs, alexandrines and ringnecks on the way! They're already lined up, so wish me luck - my hands are going to be full until Christmas, I can already tell ;)
Will take in the camera on Sunday, get some photos of the new gang!

Friday, September 25, 2009

Many Photos

As I type this, contented cockatiel murmuring sounds from cages and playstands around me. From outside, the voice of a young lorikeet begs food from a parent - I'm very tuned into this noise, as young Loris that come through the store try to use it on me! The air is filled with the scent of freshly-trimmed bottlebrush which has served as entertainment for the various parrots in my house at the moment, and now lies largely on the floor of cages, leaves chewed and bark stripped. I'm doing a double bird-sitting duty this week, and I can't tell you how wonderful it feels to have the house so filled with birds. As well as my pair of tiels and my rosella Calypso, I've currently got a second pair of tiels, an opinionated ringneck, and his cocoktiel buddy! They're all out right now, arranged between three cage-tops, the couch back (with a throw rug for safety!) and two playstands. I managed to convince them for a few brief minutes to all co-habitate on my big playgym and get some snapshots!


Depp breath: Calpyso the pale-head rosella at the very top. Georgie, the cinnamon tiel checking her out. Logan, the whiteface pearl pied, and Storm, the whiteface cinnamon pearl, on the pink ladder below Georgie. Cloud, the whiteface pied, and Max, the grey male, are on the top perch, with ringneck Jack keeping an eye on them all from beside the bottlebrush!


It's been a while since my last post here, so please enjoy some complimentary photos of the birdroom residents for the last few months!



Sandi, Sammi and Joey
Sandi and Sammi are sun conures, not related. Joey, the little Jenday, is easy to pick out with the bigger suns flanking her. She was a truly sweet little bird, quiet and loving!
Sandy was an interesting conure; she was bred from pied sun conure stock, and in the time she spent in the birdroom, she developed large yellow pied splashes over her wings, which started out nearly fully green!





Sandy with her special buddy Jay the Quaker



Joey with Silver, a ringneck - the first one of this year's season! Hopefully we'll see more soon, plus their big cousins, alexandrines!



Joey and Sammi having a snack




Three lovely little cockatiels!





These guys were just utterly adorable together! They're all scaly-breasted lorikeets, two normals (greens) and a lutino (yellow). Rascal is on the right, Sasha in the center, and Scamp on the left.





A young rainbow lorikeet with Rascal and Scamp the scaly loris.


Sherbet, the short-billed Corella.



Pablo, a two-and-year-old Alexandrine who came to us because her previous owners had wanted a male Alex, which are better talkers. Poor girl, imagine being given up just because she didn't talk well enough! she found a lovely new home very quickly, such a sweetheart - and I had my suspicions "she" was a male anyway, since there was a faint ring starting to show around the neck. Only time will tell though!



Some aviary birds: A blue ringneck, red-fronted Kakariki, green ringneck, and a lovely little Western Rosella.


And here's some of the current residents!


Grass parrots from the aviary: A male turquoise parrot watches a cinnamon Elegant parrot taking off. Three hen yellow turquoise parrots watch from the perch behind. These are small species of Australian parrots, and come in come magnificent colours!


Two more sun conures from the same pied breeder, with Trouble and Trix, two green-cheek conures.


Jack, the wonderfully cuddly long-billed corella, getting some attention from me. He recently found a home with one of our staff members, he was a bird who would steal your heart!


A male pale-head Rosella - one of the nicest coloured up Rosellas I've seen in months!


A blue Princess who I never got around to referring to anything but 'Priness' which she thoroughly acts anyway, so the name stuck!



A sibling to Sasha, the lovely Lutino Scaly, Sunny. Yes, she is this cute in real life! She loves to wrestle with me, and will lie on her back and grab my fingers gently with her beak and feet. So gentle and loving, bound to make the perfect little pet for any family who could devote the time to her she so richly deserves!

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Old friends; and Coco's story

We've been hearing from a lot of past Birdroom residents of late, which is wonderful - I love to hear how my former 'kids' are getting along with their new families!

Flame the sun conure is doing wonderfully, though being a bit naughty (as conures are prone to being!) for his new owners! Tito and Bella, a musk and a red-collar lorikeet, are now fast friends and also getting very bonded to their owners. Snowy, a white ringneck from late last year, is chewing everything in sight but his owner loves him all the same! I often wonder about Azure and Argent, the blue and grey hand-raised ringnecks I brought with Snowy, are getting along.

Flame and his sister Sandi exploring a new 'perch'

We've also had a visit from Coco, a very special Galah we rehabilitated last year. He has crippled feet, and also had severe selt-mutilation issues, pulling out not only feathers but his own toenails, and making terrible wounds on and around his feet. Despite two vet verdicts that Coco was beyond help and that his best option would be being put down... I had to at least try. It's not in my nature to give up on a life, any especially not one as special as I sensed Coco was.

So, I tried. Diet change, including the introduction of fruit and vegetables which initially he would not touch, was the first step - painstakingly slow. It took me two months to get him on pellets and fresh fruit and vegetables. While I was trying to tempt him into eating fruit and veg, he had vitamin injections - he bore them stoically.
The second step - his mutilation. Diet might help, but it's long term progress. I needed something, then and there, to help Coco break the habit of plucking feathers and mutilating his feet - I suspect they pained him and he just went mad trying to get away from it. He had pulled four nails off entirely, leaving bloody stumps of his toes, and just above one of his legs was a matted, bleeding mess where he'd torn into his own skin. It was one of the worst mutilation cases I've come across. I remember recruiting Jenna - a wildlife carer and used to dealing with the less-pretty situations that will crop up from time to time - to hold Coco for me while I tried to clean his injuries. Time and time again the paper towels I used came away red-soaked. Jenna and I agreed we had to try something drastic to stop him from doing this to himself... so we resorted to a collar.

Now I'd just like to say that collaring does NOT work in many situations - this is because it's not targeting the problem of feather-plucking, but the result. You're preventing the bird from pulling feathers, not addressing WHY it's pulling them in the first place - so it don't fix the problem.
In this situation I found it was one of the only viable options. Though I planned to make other changes to Coco's lifestyle his number one issue was those mangled feet. I made him a collar and Jenna and I spent an interesting half-hour trying to get it on him!

The next step was housing. Coco's feet were so crippled he couldn't stand on a perch when we first met. I was also worried the open wounds of his bitten toes would be prone to infection - because of course, Coco spent most of his time on the ground.
The paper in his cage had to be regularly changed to prevent this. I also set up his perches in steps. First, on the ground, was a hefty and solid cement perch. Within stepping distance, a thick natural branch, and above that two wooden dowel perches. Bit by bit he was encouraged to use his feet, flex his toes, practice his climbing and balance. Twice a day I took him out to bathe his feet in weak bedadine solution, trying to keep them clean. He would lie quietly on his back while I did this, only fussing occasionally when I cleaned a still-raw toe.
Enrichment was also part of his routine. Rotating toys, giving him leaves, bark and twigs to shred - anything to keep his mind active, and away form chewing himself!

This was the type of bird who stole everyone's heart. He always shared the lunchroom with Jenna then myself during lunches, wandering over our table (and often our lunch!), dancing, ambling over to butt our hands to get a head-rub, or talking to us - 'Hal-lo Co-co', he'd tell us in his sweet little voice. He lived in the room beside the lunchroom so that he could whistle at the staff passing through for attention and a pat. We all loved him.

Two months on - success. I'd never been so proud of any bird before. Coco was now stepping up, though very wobbly, onto hands and perches. Thriving after finally having taken to pellets, fruits and vegetables his feather condition had improved. The day we took his collar off was a tense one - I think we all half-expected to come back the next day to find his toes chewed again, but the collar seemed to have done the trick. Though he had a few minor nibbles, he seemed far more comfortable with his feet now.

Coco was rehomed with a truly lovely couple. Familiar with galahs, they had heard all about his struggles, and were fully committed to proving a loving home to a bird they knew, might never be 100% healthy. His feet will likely always remain crippled, though now they were much better without the chewed toes! In fact, his nails had actually started to grow back, when I had worried he'd damaged them too badly, so it was a pleasant surprise. With lots of love, cuddles and hope, we sent him off to his new home. Lunches were very quiet affairs for a few weeks after Coco left us.

I had a visit from Coco recently for a wingclip - and he's doing incredibly well! He can actually climb up the bars now, though he helps hold on with his beak. He sits on high perches, something he never used to. The strength in his feet is vastly improved (though as I always suspected, not 100%) and he is obviously content, well-rounded and happy.

Sometimes, no matter how much effort you put in, you miss out. Every time, that's hard And sometimes - sometimes, you win one, and it's all worth it. And when you do - when you see a bird sitting on your hand, nuzzling at you for attention, that just six months before - was under a death sentence? That now he has a happy, immensely loving home to return to? That's the sweetest success there could ever exist.

Coco on the lunchroom table, chewing at my bag!

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Long time no post

Yes, weeks since I lats posted! May was a busy month. I had my birthday, visiting relatives, and as always, ever busy at work.

We've had some beautiful hand-raised birds come an go through the birdroom. Chase, the attitude-filled green-cheek conure. A lovely pair of lorikeets, a must and a rainbow. A beautiful sun conure who was very sweet. Non-hand raised birds have been going well too, everyone seems to want budgies of late!

Anyway. I've got some nice birds still keeping me busy. Jem the Jenay conure is still with us. He's currently buddies with Jay, a very big but rather shy quaker. Jay's just starting to settle down with me though, when he comes for a walk on my shoulder out in the shop he cuddles up to my neck.

Just this afternoon I got a couple of lovely cinnamon cockatiels in. If they're still there when I go back to work on Sunday I'll be sure to get a few photos!

Monday, May 4, 2009

Back from holidays

So I've had an enjoyable and relaxing two weeks off and have now returned to work. I think I should take holidays more often, since half of my birds were sold while I was away!

This week I'm going to do a nice big bird order and hopefully there will be some interesting ones available! The weekend was a long on here in Queensland, so we had three very big days that have left with with virtually no budgies, cockatiels or canaries, plus half of the finches I had in stock have gone so I sorely need to refill the birdroom.

Sandy is still with us, but she's been sold and will probably stay no longer than a week more before her new owner takes her home. Max the blue quaker is still there, and I have two very sweet little hand raised cockatiels, but otherwise it's pretty quiet in the Birdroom right now. More news on new birds soon!