Guidelines For Good Care
General
Care- for
more detailed information please contact us,
follow our links or consult your avian
veterinarian.
Clean food dishes
The bird's food dishes should be kept clean
and free from droppings, wet food, insects,
etc. If this means cleaning them more than
once a day, it should be done. If you won't
eat out of the dish, the bird shouldn't
either.
Clean water dish or water bottle
The water source for your foster bird is a
perfect place for fungal and bacterial
growth. Many birds dunk their food before
eating it, turning it into soup. If you
won't drink the water, your bird shouldn't
either. Modern pelleted diets are very
drying to a bird, they need lots of clean
water to properly digest them.
Clean grate and cage
Grates and perches should be wiped off
regularly and disinfected, since this is
where your bird walks and plays. They are an
easy source of bacterial and fungal growth
if they are not kept clean. Care should be
taken when chemically cleaning and
disinfecting to make sure that the chemicals
you use are non-toxic. Be sure to rinse
well.
Safe place to roost and play
Make sure your foster bird's cage and play
stand are located in a safe place, away from
kitchen hazards, aggressive pets, open doors
and unscreened windows, drafts, etc. Don't
forget the ceiling fan; even the slowest fan
can cause severe damage to an unsuspecting
bird.
Birds are often noisy, it is natural
If you go running to the cage every time the
bird starts screaming he will learn to
scream to get attention. Try to ignore the
bird when it is screaming, and as soon as it
quiets down go praise it and give it some
attention.
When to call an Avian Veterinarian
The following are guidelines for when an
avian veterinarian should be called:
Birds that may be seen
at the owner's convenience:
Annual physical examination
Breeding check
Blood collection for DNA sexing
Chronic feather picking
Microchipping
Psittacine Beak and Feather Disease/
polyoma virus screening
Wing, beak, nail trim
Birds that should be seen the day of call:
Cough or sneeze
Eye or nasal discharge
Acute feather picking
Watery droppings
Loss of appetite
Feather loss around the eyes
Fluffed appearance
Newly acquired healthy baby bird examination
Postmortem examination (death)
Vomiting or regurgitation (some regurgitation is an
affectionate feeding response and not from illness.)
Birds that should be
seen immediately:
Eye injury
Cat or dog induced injury
Mate induced injury
Broken Blood Feather
Excessive bleeding/torn nails
Bleeding from mouth or vent
Seizures
Lying on the bottom of the cage
Labored breathing
Laying hen appears ill
Head Trauma
Blunt trauma
Fracture
Open Wound
Ingestion of foreign body
Diet
It is important that you keep your foster bird on the same
diet that it was on when you got it and start offering the
Greyhaven mixture in a separate bowl. If the avian
veterinarian suggests that the diet be modified, do it only
under his direction over a period of weeks or months. Until
your bird recognizes the new food as "food", it could lose
weight and even starve to death. Care needs to be taken that
the bird has sufficient droppings to indicate that it is
eating enough. Following are suggested diet guidelines:
Pellets
Pellets should be placed in a clean bowl by the perch
the bird uses the most. The bird should always have
pellets available. Many experts think a bird's diet
should be about 75% pellets or more.
Fruits and vegetables
These need to be thoroughly washed. Fruits are more in
the treat category; many of them, like grapes and
apples, are mostly sugar and water. Dark vegetables are
generally the most nutritious, like squash, carrots,
broccoli, yams, beans, spinach.
Seeds and nuts
These should be treats only. They are very high in fat
and low in nutrition. An all seed diet is VERY BAD! If
the bird came into rescue on an all seed diet, be sure
to discuss it with the veterinarian or a Greyhaven
Director.
Carbohydrates
Birds typically love pasta of all kinds. There are many
commercial pasta/bean mixes available that are healthy
and generally well-accepted by pet birds. You can also
make your own but be sure to discuss it with a Greyhaven
Director. If you are eating cereal or rice you can share
a little with your bird if it doesn't have heavy cheesy
or salted sauces on it.
Vitamins and supplements
If a bird is on a good pellet-based diet it will seldom
need these. Extra calcium may be important for African
Greys and laying hens. If you have any concerns in this
area, discuss it with a Greyhaven Director.
Toxic Foods
Most of what we eat can be safely eaten in small
quantities by your bird but use common sense. Fatty and
salty foods are not good for either of you! Keep your
bird away from avocado, coffee, chocolate, alcohol. A
bird has very delicate lungs, DO NOT SMOKE around the
bird! Many houseplants are toxic as well, so do not
allow your bird to chew on them.
Grit
Parrots chew their food; therefore, they DO NOT NEED
GRIT in their diets like some other birds do.
Bathing
All birds need frequent baths to maintain good feather
quality. If the bird won't bathe in a bowl of water try
other options like misting it with a misting bottle or
taking it into the shower with you. Bathing promotes healthy
preening and keeps the feathers clean and flexible. It also
helps prevent dry skin.
Clipping Wings and Nails
Always keep the bird's wings clipped if the bird has always
been clipped. The veterinarian can refresh the trim at the
initial visit and that clip should be maintained. Do not
attempt to modify the clip by yourself. Clipping too
severely can cause the bird to drop like a rock and it can
injure itself. If not clipped, they can fly into walls,
furniture, windows, or out the door.
If a bird has always been fully flighted then it should not
be clipped until an appropriate action plan has taken place
between the avian vet and yourself to determine what is best
for the bird.
The veterinarian may suggest having the bird's nails trimmed
during their checkup. Long nails can get caught in things,
and sharp nails hurt. A cement perch can be used to help
keep nails trimmed, but be careful that your bird doesn't
spend all its time on it, sore feet can result. You should
check the birds' feet weekly for sores if you are using a
cement perch.
Caging
The cage should be large enough that the bird can exercise
and stretch its wings without touching the bars of the cage
or hanging toys. The bars should be spaced so that the bird
cannot get its head caught and look for pinch points where
toes or the band can become caught. The cage should be
located against at least one wall, away from windows and
doors that open, and out of the reach of other pets (think
Tweety and Sylvester). Care should be taken to make sure it
is not situated where the bird can become overheated (hot
sun) or chilled (drafts).
Lighting
Birds should not be kept in dim areas, they need light.
Full-spectrum lighting is good as it helps them use the
calcium and vitamin D in their diets. Sunlight is the best
though. During warm weather take the bird outside in its
cage for short periods but never leave the bird alone. Also,
ensure it can get out of the hot sun.
Toys
Parrots are smart animals that need stimulation. They must
have toys to play with and chew on. But many toys are
dangerous. Rope toys can fray and wrap around toes, nylon
and plastic rope is absolutely forbidden because the strands
will not break. Rope toys need to be supervised, and all
frayed ends cut off.
Be very careful that the links and connectors on toys can't
trap toes and beaks as parrots will pry open connectors and
sometimes they will snap back on them. Chain links should be
welded closed. C-clips are best for hanging toys.
Many household items make good cheap toys. Toilet paper
rolls are great for play and chewing, as are wooden spools,
popsicle sticks, plastic bottle caps, old fashioned
clothespins. Birds need to have chew toys to exercise and
trim their beaks. Try new toys and rotate to keep your bird
busy and his environment stimulating.
Foraging is also a great activity to create for your parrot.
It helps create how they would act in the wild. There are
several ways to recreate this activity. One ways is a
Foraging Tray or station which is a tray or station full of
“stuff” for your bird to rummage through for long stretches
of time. Your bird should find buried nuts and dry treats or
foods amongst some toys, paper strips .
Parrots are not goldfish ... they can't be left in their
cage all day without interaction with the family. You need
to spend at least 2-3 hours a day playing with the bird or
it will likely be very unhappy.
E-mail:
info@greyhaven.bc.ca