Tag Archives: eye

Mating Cockatiels, advise?

I often personally rescue animals and try to find them a new home once they are healthy and sociable, if I don’t become attached that is. In the beginning of December, I was referred to a home that had a pair of cockatiels that were living in an extremely unhealthy habitat. They were not being fed or watered properly, they had mold growing in the water dish, droppings inches deep on the bottom of the rabbit cage that they were being kept it and one had a severe eye infection, they were not vocal, they were scared, dirty and over all unhealthy. I was able to take possession of the tiels, I got them clean, healthy and the eye infection taken care of and of course, became attached. I assumed that they were the same sex (I know some will not accept a cage mate of the same sex, but it is not impossible) because they had never mated before but I also knew that their stressful environment could also be the problem. Then about two weeks ago, I noticed that they had started to mate. I’ve caught them in action 3 or 4 different days. I know that it can take around 20-30 days for her to lay her first clutch of eggs and then another 20-30 days for them to hatch, I have consulted with a local pet store that also raise birds and they helped me pick out a calcium supplement for the bird to lay healthy hard eggs and also helped me to pick out a nesting box. What I’m wondering is, how likely is it for them to try to mate if they are of the same sex? I do know that some dogs, whether it be two males or a female in heat will often try to mate with another dog of the same sex, cats not so much (though a friend of mine had a cat and dog that tried to mate on occasion). How do I know that they are actually mating and not just relieving their natural sexual frustration? Do I just wait to see if “she” lays eggs? Also, when they lay and they do hatch, is it best to hand raise them or let the mother and father raise them (yes, the father will help the mother)? I’ve always dealt with rescuing dogs and cats, so I’m a little lost when it comes to birds.

I’m sure that this question seems weird and possibly crazy, but it is a serious question and I do ask for only serious responses! Any true advise would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks so much! The pet store did in fact say no grit or crushed oyster shells because they may eat too much and it may become compacted in their stomachs. They told me to just use the reptile calcium supplement once, maybe twice a week sprinkled on their food and I was not advised to add anything to their water. Since I got them, I’ve been giving them vitamin drops in their food and it really did seem to help them become healthy faster. They gained weight, their feathers became much more normal and I’ve experienced no problems with the birds since I’ve had them.

Is there any information on the eye acuity of turtles?

I have a lake in back of my house and I often place food at the waters edge to feed the birds and turtles. I am amazed at how the turtles can find the food on the bank of the lake within minutes. I see them (3-5) some 50 ft. out surfacing to look at the food site. they seem to take turns watching and come in when one after another turtle has eaten. When I walk to the glass door to look out, another 40 ft. from them they scatter. This seems to point out that they have an excellent sense of smell and vision.

Can u keep abandoned baby starlings?

At my girlfriends grandparents house theres some birds that fallen from there nests so i put them in a box under the nest i have been keeping an eye on them but the mother will not go down and feed them, and my girlfriend wants to take care of them and keep them but i told her no because most birds are protected but someone told me the birds were starlings and they are not protected. so can she keep them? cause its been over a day and the mom still hasn’t feed them. also if she can then how do i make sure there starlings?

Breeding pair of Love Birds

in this video you will see a pair meeting for the first time and only had 5 seonds to meet and this was the outcome…..lolenjoy the video.

Help..I rescued a baby bird…what do I feed it?

The cat had gotten it…now it’s in a bird cage. It’s survived the night..alert and drinking water from a eye dropper. Thistle is there if it wants it.
Oh..it’s not a real young bird but not quite able to fly. Looks like it needs some tail feathers. Probably why our cat found it. It’s a female House Finch.
We have Lindsey Museum in the next town which has an animal rescue hospital there but their closed on Sundays. What do I feed the little gal until then?
(and yes..I did take her outside hoping maybe the trama was over for her and she could fly away…she just tried to run fluttering her wing, that’s how I know she can’t fly yet! Maybe fell outta a nest..dont know!

Anybody?
And please be serious…no jerk answerers…I love birds!
Thanks
SmileyCat : )

Help! My female parakeet (who’s feeding babies) has a broken beak! What can I do?

My parakeet’s been in her nesting box so much that I didn’t realize her beak’s broken. She’s been looking haggard and had gunk on her face and in her facial feathers, (and missing facial feathers, on right side of face, around eye.) I figured it was from nursing so many babies. I couldn’t see that her beak was broken until a couple days ago when I could get a good look at her.
It’s the bottom half of the top beak that’s broken off. What looked like gunk before I think is actually scar tissue/dried flesh where the beak was severed.
I called a vet that deals with parakeets and he called back and left a v.m. that said it could have fell off from nutritional deficiencies common in nursing parakeet mothers or that it could be mites. But the other birds seem unaffected, except the dad bird’s feathers around the beak are starting to look a little weird (he nurses her so she can nurse babies, so he might be lacking nutrients?)
He said he could fashion a beak but don’t they grow back?
I put the other birds in another cage so there’s not as much competition for food (just the dad bird is in the cage adjoining her nesting box.) But I don’t think she can eat very well, she doesn’t seem to shell seeds (or even try to eat her own food often) and it seems like her tongue could dry out. I also noticed her smaller baby had hardened food gunk all over its face and was unable to be fed with that there–I don’t think she can use her beak to feed properly. What I’m wondering is what I can really do with her beak when she’s still feeding young, and what kind of cost I’d be looking at to bring her to a vet. It’s worth it since they live 20 years, but if it’d grow back on it’s own, maybe I could hand feed her and monitor the babies until then? I don’t have a lot of cash to be spending hundreds if there’s another way. Advice?

how do I care for and orphaned Deer Bird?

When I was mowing the lawn, a baby Deer Bird kept following me. I watched it from the porch for nearly and hour and the mother never came back for it. Now my children have it in a bird cage and have been giving it water with an eye dropper, but it needs more than that, but I don’t know what to feed it or how….