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Girltron

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About Girltron

  • Birthday 07/08/1979

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  • Biography
    Francis is a 14 year old red-factor Congo, male. He's living in his 3rd home and hopefully happy!

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  • Location
    Tidewater, VA

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  1. Francis does this but in slow motion...he lifts his leg and straaaaaains as high as he can. He prefers his right over his left, but he'll do both. Sometimes he works so hard his little eye gets all buggy and he has to shake out his leg to relax it. I was told he's always done it...best I can figure is it's his weird form of exercise. We call it "doing parrot-ups".
  2. Girltron

    Yogurt!

    Thanks Spock, I read that and that's why I was wondering if Dave would object. I'd like to know what illnesses I might need to worry about that I wouldn't see in his droppings resulting from eating yogurt. The plain greek yogurt I buy is quite tart BTW, and I imagine it's been pretty thoroughly digested by the cultures. It's not like some of those sweet commercial yogurts. I don't have problems with it myself, and I don't eat any other dairy so otherwise I'd have discomfort from it.
  3. I bet he wouldn't...Francis love boxes too. The first week he came home, we had built him a box shelter on one side of his central perch so he could hide if he felt uncomfortable. He did use it for that for about one day, and it was so funny to watch him get in because we forgot that tails get in the way: he had to do an exaggerated 3-point turn to get his butt in there. Soon thereafter, he'd chewed that box to bits and has had a new one each week since then.
  4. Girltron

    Yogurt!

    They can eat cinnamon sticks? I've got a ton.... For the yogurt, I found this: http://www.exoticpetvet.net/avian/dairy.html would you consider this advice suspect, Dave?
  5. He moved. That's all. The object behind is more stationary than his toe. Cute feet!
  6. Girltron

    Yogurt!

    Wow, Francis LOVES Greek yogurt. He'll eat as much as a half tablespoon at a time if offered. Sometimes he picks it off the spoon with his foot and munches at the glob until it's gone...then looks at his sticky foot as if to wonder why he did that! I don't suppose dairy is all that fantastic, but the extra calcium is bound to be helpful. I've started giving him a teaspoon or so of it each morning. Does the live bacteria maybe help with the digestion of the milk proteins, the way it seems to in humans? I haven't noticed much of a change in his droppings.
  7. That sounds like a great schedule! I think I'll imitate you, but stick also with my morning time outside. He seems to enjoy talking to the wild birds. His grey feathers look so beautiful in true sunlight, too! No comparison to any kind of indoor lighting. I'll look into building my own fixture, because the bulbs are a lot less than the specialized lamps...do you have any tips for me?
  8. Hey all, My new Avian Sun bulb stopped working after 2 weeks and even though I'm getting it replaced, I no longer trust it to give Francis enough UVB to keep his vitamin D levels up. I've been setting his sleep cage outside every morning between 7 and 8 a.m. to supplement. It's the only time of day that I can do this. I can't find any information that seems helpful to tell me if he's getting a decent amount of UVB at this time of day. Do you think this will be good enough for him to manufacture vitamin D? Related: what about those lamps sold to S.A.D. sufferers? They look like they have better stated performance than the avian bulbs. I could set up one of those lamps beside his cage for an hour in the mornings, on a timer. Bad? Good?
  9. OK Chezron, I went back and read your first post on this thread and I think I'm going to try your advice. I started thinking that spraying him when I see him biting his feathers might constitute a "drama reward" and it's true that daily bathing isn't supposed to be a great idea. I don't want his skin to get more irritated because of that! I made some colloidal oatmeal and I'll probably mist his belly and under his wings every third day with a mixture of aloe and oatmeal. I found that the oatmeal mixed into the aloe or water didn't spray very well but the trick is to put a teaspoon of finely ground oatmeal into a cup of aloe and let it sit in the fridge for a day, then strain the mix before putting it into the spray bottle. I'll try putting his sleep cage into the shower once a week for a nice deep soak like you recommended: it's one easy way to clean that cage, too! Finally, I can bring his sleep cage outside for 20 minutes or so while I clean his big cage, make his breakfast, and so on in the morning. I can be right there watching him if he's on the front porch, and still get those chores done at the same time. As you said, the bulb wasn't enough for you so it might not be enough for Francis either. Meanwhile I just have to get into the habit of ignoring him when he bites his feathers. It's so hard to do. We stayed home yesterday for our anniversary and just like on the weekend, Francis was talky and playful and happy but still picked certain times to bite his feathers.
  10. I'm sure that would be great for him. But I'm mostly not home during sunshine hours! Also we did get him a full spectrum light bulb so as far as vitamin D is concerned I would hope that would take care of it. I've started increasing his sleep time. We're up to 11 hours a night. I read somewhere that that can trigger an end to a hormonal period.
  11. I know this isn't really helpful or anything, and I just need to learn to be patient...but I am SO unhappy about Francis's feather picking. He was grouchy-bird yesterday and tried to bite feathers both yesterday and today. I sprayed him with aloe at the places he was biting each time, and it stopped the activity. I hope in the long run that pays off, because I can actually see some bare wing on his right side and it's all nibbled back to such an extent that we've nicknamed him Halfwing. It's definitely hormonal and centered around my husband. We were out of the house all day until dinner: Francis didn't chew his feathers all day until after we got home. Frank's been having far less contact with Francis lately but I don't know how long I might need to wait to see some improvement. Even with me, Francis is prone to regurgitating and bobbing his head when I talk to him through the cage bars. I'm pretty sure that's mating behavior too. But it's hard to even interact with him without seeing some of that. We try not to get close to him when he's out of the cage, so he stays distracted by toys or chewing pieces of my kitchen to shreds.
  12. Thanks so much! I'm not new to rehabbing "secondhand" critters, but very new to birds. Francis is the one who befriended us in the beginning...I used to talk to him when I was at my friends' house, and he got to where he'd make contact calls to both of us the whole time we were visiting, even if we were on the other end of the property. He could hear our whistles from there! I'll admit some things probably won't change. But when it's vet time it's vet time, after all. For everyday stuff I let him move around at his own pace. He has a ladder I use when I want him to move from cage to cage or from floor to cage. A couple of almonds placed on the ladder work every time! I shoot competitively sometimes and I happen to have a match this weekend. So no fingers to play with until after the match...the bitten one is actually my trigger finger. Luckily I have full mobility. But after that we're going to start working on handling again. I'll start by touching his feet and beak through the cage bars.
  13. yeah I notice that's just colloidal oatmeal! I can make that myself. I'll try it this weekend. Cheers! So I understand about frequent bathing not being good, normally. But it does work for Francis. So his first bath of the day starts with water and then finished with aloe, and his second bath is just a light aloe misting. We'll cut back when we see nice feather growth, and by then I'm sure he'll be over his little obsession!
  14. Just found this club, and boy do I belong! It's not Francis's fault. His previous homes must have taught him that he gets left alone when he bites. Both my friends that I adopted him from confided in me that they have scars from him. I learned this AFTER I got my first chomp-down. We're not talking gentle warning nips (I do admit to his right to resort to those if I don't understand what he's trying to tell me. It's happened twice, and I complied with what he wanted both times) but beak-grinding, blood-flowing, ouchies. He was on his perch at the time and I was offering to move him out for playtime. My husband was in the room after being gone most of the day, and like I've said elsewhere Francis seems to have all his behavior problems in relation to my husband. Of course I still need to teach him alternatives to biting, because this isn't going to be the only stress he ever comes across...but for now, that seems to be the only cause. So far my short-term solution has been to not offer soft bits to bite on. I even bought a pair of tan leather gloves, but they're scary so oh well. I want to teach him step-up using a stick for those times when he really needs to be moved and he's giving me the squint...but the stick's still scary too, I've been showing it to him every day, giving it kisses and gnawing on it like a goon to let him know it's safe.
  15. Actually I think he loves it...he walks around the kitchen dragging his beak and toes, and sometimes will stop, look around at the floor, and then softly bump! his beak down onto the linoleum. It's grey. He looks for the corners, I wondered if maybe it appears similar to newspaper to him? Shredding newspapers is his least-expensive favorite hobby. Tonight when I let him out, I'll have to barricade that spot with toys. Maybe I'll tuck a spinach leaf in there. Guaranteed to lose interest that way!
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