Tallyollyopia
01-20-2015, 12:00 AM
Note: I do not know if I'm handling this correctly, just that it's working.
I have two peach faced lovebirds, Gully and Fern (yes, they're named after the movie), and about a week ago I noticed that Gully's chest feathers were looking a little ragged. I didn't think it was a big deal (the house has been warmer than normal due to the changes in the weather), so I ignored it. (Gully has always been an enthusiastic bather.) A couple of days later a bald patch appeared. I took them to the vet. It is not caused by mites, fungus, or that other thing the vet said might be causing it. He then suggested that perhaps it's caused by stress, and wanted to put a collar on both birds (even though only one of them was over preening) in order to stop this from happening.
I did not like this idea. I'll be the first to admit that I don't know all that much about lovebirds and that all of what I do know I learned in the past year (beginning with the day they were practically dropped on my doorstep), but it seems to me that a collar that keeps the birds from, well, preening, is asking for a build-up of oils, whatever that fluff is called that gets caught between feathers (on all breeds of birds; I have had birds before), and that just strikes me as just as unhealthy as the bald spot.
What I did was this: I started bringing the birds out of my room and into the main areas of the home (I originally kept them in my room to protect them from the cat), and every time I noticed Gully beginning to preen the bald spot or around the bald spot I thwacked the top of the cage. It's been three days and he's stopped his zealous over preening (he's still preening normally), but I have no idea what caused it to begin in the first place. (My roommates got the cat in October.)
Did I handle this right? How do I keep it from happening again? What caused it in the first place?
I have two peach faced lovebirds, Gully and Fern (yes, they're named after the movie), and about a week ago I noticed that Gully's chest feathers were looking a little ragged. I didn't think it was a big deal (the house has been warmer than normal due to the changes in the weather), so I ignored it. (Gully has always been an enthusiastic bather.) A couple of days later a bald patch appeared. I took them to the vet. It is not caused by mites, fungus, or that other thing the vet said might be causing it. He then suggested that perhaps it's caused by stress, and wanted to put a collar on both birds (even though only one of them was over preening) in order to stop this from happening.
I did not like this idea. I'll be the first to admit that I don't know all that much about lovebirds and that all of what I do know I learned in the past year (beginning with the day they were practically dropped on my doorstep), but it seems to me that a collar that keeps the birds from, well, preening, is asking for a build-up of oils, whatever that fluff is called that gets caught between feathers (on all breeds of birds; I have had birds before), and that just strikes me as just as unhealthy as the bald spot.
What I did was this: I started bringing the birds out of my room and into the main areas of the home (I originally kept them in my room to protect them from the cat), and every time I noticed Gully beginning to preen the bald spot or around the bald spot I thwacked the top of the cage. It's been three days and he's stopped his zealous over preening (he's still preening normally), but I have no idea what caused it to begin in the first place. (My roommates got the cat in October.)
Did I handle this right? How do I keep it from happening again? What caused it in the first place?