Bee, I vote for making this thread a sticky. Would miss it if it shut down, but I admit I am struggling to keep up with 50-100 posts/day. And I mostly lurk. Can't imagine how much time you must put into it, since you answer most of the posts.
Walt - ouch. You are right, this definitely a reason to keep this thread going. Or at least make it a sticky.
The key phrase in that post is "been to the vet..." So, I have to wonder - why did the vet recommend all the expensive treatments? Why didn't the vet just counsel that person and advise culling the bird? Oh, yeah... Most vet schools don't train vets to deal with typical pet birds, let alone chickens. Even "avian certified" vets may not have much real-life experience treating things with feathers. So when confronted with a chicken the typical urban vet will pull from the parrot bag of treatment tricks because hey, a chicken is a bird and aren't all birds the same? Treatments that make sense for a parrot (life expectancy 30-100 years, expensive to purchase) do not usually make sense for a chicken (life expectancy 3-10 years, inexpensive to purchase). And they wind up doing all sorts of extreme stuff to try to keep the doomed bird alive, when the most humane thing to do would be cull. Oops... I mean "put it to sleep." It is sad. Maybe there should be some OT common sense outreach to the veterinarian community as well. I suspect most vets would prefer not to milk all that money from a client at the expense of the animal, even when the client is begging to be milked.
FYI, the treatments that poster was describing must be standard fare in the bag of avian treatment tricks. It's almost exactly the same course of treatments an avian vet tried on my cockatiel several years ago. Which failed to save the bird but did provide me a valuable if hideously expensive lesson in the economics of maintaining an unthrifty bird of poor genetic stock for mushy personal reasons.
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Bruce, I thought I had bookmarked your FF thread but now I can't find it. Could you re-post the link? (if you haven't already - I'm probably 30 posts behind now, since it's taken me so long to write this post ...)
Thanks to Walt, Bee, Al, and all the other OT's who have been helping to show us newbies on the straight and narrow. It's working.
Sarah