Showing posts with label weighing parrots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label weighing parrots. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Tips to Make Veterinary Visits Stress Free for your Parrot

Many of our pets don’t  like going to the veterinary hospital. And it is difficult for us to see our companion animals upset. The good news is that training can really make a difference.

When it comes to companion parrots there are very few behaviors they need to know that can really make a difference in veterinary care. Probably the most important behavior to train is being comfortable with restraint in a towel. Most parrots do not like being captured or restrained against their will. By training this behavior with positive reinforcement you can significantly reduce or eliminate stress when visiting the veterinarian. There are many different ways to train this behavior and you can see some examples in my DVD Training Your Parrot for the Veterinary Exam.

Another behavior that is very helpful is to train your parrot to stand comfortably on a scale. This is something that you can easily train at home. If you are very good about regularly weighing your parrots and keeping a record of this information there is a good chance your bird won't even need to be weighed at the veterinary clinic. You can weigh your bird before you go. This information is very helpful to your veterinarian. You can find a scale to weigh your parrots at stores that sell mailing supplies, scales for weighing food and avian specialty stores. Check out my parrots getting weighed in the video clip below.



It's also good idea to train your parrot to be comfortable loading into some sort of transport cage or container. If your bird is not comfortable with this, just getting to the veterinarian could be quite difficult and stress inducing. I prefer to use a wire collapsible dog crate that has two doors for my larger birds. It is pretty easy to train parrots to load into this type of transport cage. Be sure to include practicing driving your bird around in your car. This part needs to be trained too. Be aware that some parrots will get motion sickness. A sure sign of this is when your parrot starts to regurgitate when the car is moving.  For birds that tend to get motion sickness, avoid giving a big meal before going in the car. You can also put the crate in the front seat so your parrot can see where you are going to help prevent feeling sick. Take turns slowly and keep your trips short if you can.

When it's time to go to the vet, be sure to bring along favorite treats and toys. Familiar items from home that are associated with good things can help your parrot be more comfortable. I actually bring my scale from home because my birds know it is associated with good things. Standing on it and getting treats helps them relax quicker. My macaw Blu Lu enjoys playing with toys at the veterinary hospital in the clip below.


Another important behavior to train is teaching your bird to accept fluids from a syringe. This is in case your bird ever gets sick and needs medication. If your bird already knows how to take many different types of fluids from a syringe then it will be no big deal when he needs to take medication. The alternative is to have to restrain him every day to squirt the medication in his mouth. Most parrots don't like this, and if you have to do it, the procedure could damage the relationship you have with your parrot. You can learn more about training this behavior from my e-book Train Your Parrot to Accept Medication. You can get the e-book for free by going to this link http://www.goodbirdinc.com/ebookoffer/. http://www.goodbirdinc.com/ebookoffer/. Go through the steps like you're going to buy the book. Enter the code PARROTRX in the special code box and hit apply. This will bring the cost down to zero and you will get the e-book for free.

Your parrot will live a long time. Training these four simple behaviors can be done quite quickly and will make a big difference in how your parrot experiences a visit to the veterinarian. I hope you will give them a try with your parrot.

Barbara Heidenreich has been a professional animal trainer since 1990. Her company Good Bird Inc (www.GoodBirdInc.com) provides parrot training DVDs, books and workshops. She has been a featured speaker in eighteen countries and has been published in nine languages. Barbara also consults on animal training in zoos.

Barbara Heidenreich
Copyright 2014
www.BarbarasFFAT.com

Friday, January 14, 2011

Scale Training Parrots. A Life Saving Behavior


What simple behavior could save your parrot’s life? Scale training! Sounds silly but getting and recording regular weights on your parrot can be a life saver. One of the things we know about parrots is that they have a tendency to mask signs of illness. The theory behind this is that in the wild standing out as a sick parrot might make you a prime target for a predator. Therefore it is to your advantage to “pretend” to feel good, even when you don’t.

Many times when a parrot is not feeling well, they consume less of their diet and water. Sometimes they don’t process food properly. Such parrots can drop weight very quickly. Because parrots can easily fluff up their feathers and look quite robust, a weight loss may not be visible to the naked eye. However the scale doesn’t lie. A sick bird can drop quite a few grams, even overnight. And this rapid weight loss can be a signal to parrot owners to take their bird to their avian veterinarian or at the very least keep an eye out for more signs of illness.

A scale that can be used to weigh a parrot can be purchased at most office supplies stores. Look in the postage scale section. I was able to find one for around $30. Be sure to pick one that weighs in one gram increments. Five or ten grams increments are too great of a fluctuation for weighing parrots.

Some people prefer to use a scale that has a perch attached to it. Avian specialty stores often carry these. However I found it quite simple to train a parrot to step from my hand onto the flat surface of a scale. Just be sure to place the scale near the edge of the counter so that the tail of the bird can hang freely. If the tail is resting on a surface it will influence the number on the scale. You can get step by step instructions on how to train this and other behaviors helpful to the health and welfare of your parrot from my DVD Training Your Parrot for the Veterinary Exam.

In this clip you get to see Blu Lu the Blue Throated Macaw and Delbert both demonstrating how they step up onto a scale. I weigh them about one time per week just to make sure they are maintaining a healthy weight. Keep in mind each bird is an individual and the perfect weight for your bird may not be perfect for someone else’s. For example, I have two Amazon parrots in my home. One has weighed about 306 grams for over twenty years. The other typically weighs in at 460 grams. Neither is obese nor skinny. They are just right for their body size.

It takes practice and exposure to a number of parrots, but another great way to evaluate your parrot’s condition it to feel the muscle on either side of their keeled sternum. This is called body condition scoring. In the Summer 2010 (Vol 6 issue 2 )of Good Bird Magazine there is a chart provided by the Kaytee Learning Center to help you interpret what you are feeling for when checking a parrot’s condition by touch. This does take some practice and it helps to have an experienced person by your side to help you learn how to do this properly and tell you what to feel for. But if body condition scoring doesn’t sound like your cup of tea, rest assured that scale training is super easy and something most parrots can learn to eagerly do in one to two training sessions. I hope you will give this behavior a try with the parrots in your home. It’s a life saver!

Barbara Heidenreich
www.GoodBirdInc.com
Copyright 2011 Good Bird Inc