bird-brain
10-06-2010, 10:04 PM
First let me say hello to everyone! It seems like forever since I have been on here! This show season has been too busy and I almost for got what the computer looks like. I have thought of everyone often and hoped everybirdie was well!
Now my question: Many of you will remember that when we took Kenya in she had been in a very stressful environment and wasn't being fed properly. Her response to stress was to pluck her chest. I wish I had been able to post pictures for you guys to see how beautiful she had become over the summer. The plucking stopped completely. Her feathers were bright and vibrant and she and Cabo were sleeping in the cutest positions in their cozy.
All of my birds got into a very heavy but normal molt toward the end of the summer. Over the weekend, I came home from the store to find a Kenya DUCK. She no longer looks like a lovie as she has NO tail feathers. She or Cabo plucked her rear end completely bald! It is not red, or swollen. And she has not resumed the chest plucking. She seemed herself without a tail.
The avian vet will not be in town until the end of next week and I was going to wait until then as nothing else seemed amiss. But, tonight, she kicked Cabo out of the cozy. They always sleep on top of one another and are the usual inseparable lovie pair. She was so mean about not letting him in that I put an extra cozy in the cage but bless his heart he is sleeping on top of the one she is in. I can palpate her pelvic bones and there is no sign of an egg. Keep in mind that Cabo is just a year old and of undetermined sex. Is it possible that Kenya is nesty and just refusing to allow another hen into the nest with her?
Kenya is a very docile bird. She has shown no signs of aggression in the open cage and as Cabo naps in the open, I don't know if she is in general refusing to allow him any use of the cozy during the day. Our busy summer schedule did not seem to affect the birds. The only change was that I ran out of avi-cakes (bad mommy) and the lovies got their usual pellets and seed and fresh food and the conure's nutriberries instead. Any ideas about this butt plucking and bad attitude?
Now my question: Many of you will remember that when we took Kenya in she had been in a very stressful environment and wasn't being fed properly. Her response to stress was to pluck her chest. I wish I had been able to post pictures for you guys to see how beautiful she had become over the summer. The plucking stopped completely. Her feathers were bright and vibrant and she and Cabo were sleeping in the cutest positions in their cozy.
All of my birds got into a very heavy but normal molt toward the end of the summer. Over the weekend, I came home from the store to find a Kenya DUCK. She no longer looks like a lovie as she has NO tail feathers. She or Cabo plucked her rear end completely bald! It is not red, or swollen. And she has not resumed the chest plucking. She seemed herself without a tail.
The avian vet will not be in town until the end of next week and I was going to wait until then as nothing else seemed amiss. But, tonight, she kicked Cabo out of the cozy. They always sleep on top of one another and are the usual inseparable lovie pair. She was so mean about not letting him in that I put an extra cozy in the cage but bless his heart he is sleeping on top of the one she is in. I can palpate her pelvic bones and there is no sign of an egg. Keep in mind that Cabo is just a year old and of undetermined sex. Is it possible that Kenya is nesty and just refusing to allow another hen into the nest with her?
Kenya is a very docile bird. She has shown no signs of aggression in the open cage and as Cabo naps in the open, I don't know if she is in general refusing to allow him any use of the cozy during the day. Our busy summer schedule did not seem to affect the birds. The only change was that I ran out of avi-cakes (bad mommy) and the lovies got their usual pellets and seed and fresh food and the conure's nutriberries instead. Any ideas about this butt plucking and bad attitude?