Update: She’s still getting all the good stuff — her specialty chop mixed with damp crumbles, a bit more protein than usual, and grit in the tiniest bowl known to mankind. She gets fresh herbs every day for 'foraging', and I swap her towel out each morning as bedding (stays cleaner and less dust than pine chips). She definitely misses the others, but they’re side-by-side in separate cages so she’s never alone.
I apply her ointment in the morning paired with her “protein bribe” (cooked salmon, egg, or sardines). When the other three go outside in the playpen to explore, she stays with me on the sofa and falls asleep while quietly cooing.
Her skin is healing much faster than expected. There’s still a gnarly scab where the wound was worst, and she’s steadily putting on weight — very slowly, but consistently. And when she runs around the house? Immediate chaos. She hunts down every parrot scrap like a tiny, feathered vacuum, and she is
hyper. With her speed and that ridiculous greasy hairstyle, she could’ve auditioned for
Grease. I jokingly call her “Grease Lightning” when she gets the zoomies.
She’s eating and drinking beautifully. Her flight skills are impressive, so she’s clearly staying strong. Today I’m mounting a small roosting bar in her enclosure so she’ll (hopefully) stop sleeping on the floor in her own doo-doo. I love the finch-cage setup — she can’t wedge herself through the bars, and I can slip my hand in so she can cuddle up against me.
The other three aren’t mean to her at all; they actually miss her. But every now and then there’s a curious peck, and I can’t risk anyone knocking off a scab so separate they must remain.
Since it is 5 days of meloxicam and oral antibiotics we have stopped them. Still getting her oitnment, spay or just a touch of saline.
Here she is today:
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Edit: the rest of her wounds (not just the scalping) are healing incredibly well- Baffling compared to parrot counterparts I normally deal with.
So while we want to keep them safe-
I think isolation is a killer. So if possible, I recommend keeping your one birds in hospital cage, and their best friend side by side. I notice that when the other birds eat, she eats. When they play, she is less lethargic and stretches her wings. Isolation can be a killer to any animal, especially floock prey animals.