Late night thoughts.
I’m trying to come up with ways to get him more mentally stimulated without over-exerting him. We have had him since Sept 2019, so coming up on 3 years (funny, really thought it had been longer). He plays with toys now, but still seems mostly content to nap the day away unless his Enemy Numero Uno (my partner) is in the vicinity or I drag both kids over and create a ruckus. We’ve had all sorts of cage/playstand locations and configurations- living room, bedroom, office, etc- but he is has been determinedly sedentary no matter the locale.
Got a call from the vet to let us know that all of the bacteria from his culture was gone except for the e-coli, and that one was greatly reduced. The vet wants us to put benebac in his chop daily for the time being and see if that gets everything down within normal levels. I wonder how he got such a nasty infection in the first place, as compared to most bird cages and set ups I’ve seen we keep his areas really clean. Perhaps he’s just more prone to them for some reason?
The nares getting clogged mystifies me too. We are 100% on best-practices now; daily baths, humidifier, air filter, etc. we keep his room above 75 degrees too.
The heart murmur is a huge concern - he’s finally molted all but one of his clipped flight feathers, and I know it’s important to exercise when you’ve got heart disease, but it’s difficult to tell when he’s overexerted because his resting heart rate is high and we are still working on getting him to let me handle him more thoroughly. For example, he won’t lay on his back or let me look at his wings and feet most of the time.
I’m thinking maybe trick training is the way to go here, because he’s lost interest in his latest set of toys and while I am going to refresh those too, I feel like we could be doing better than just endlessly shoving toys at him and hoping for the best. It’s funny because our cockatiel responded to training super easily but Kirby has never seemed very interested.
I would like to re-fledge him if at all possible, but I am worried his body can no longer handle that level of exertion now that he has the heart murmur and tachycardia. I know that we are redoing his heart X-rays in May, and I’m hoping to get more info about what limits we should be setting then, but it’s hard to not know.
I guess some of this is that I really miss Cricket, our cockatiel. He was always an active little guy and loved doing tricks etc, he was so quick to pick up on things, and was always ready to try something new. Maybe I’ve just not given Kirby a chance to shine, but I also don’t want to stress him out. He he’s the kind of bird who tends to come for scratches and then when he’s done pointedly shuffles out of reach.
In his defense, we’ve successfully tackled liver disease, a huge diet change, and he’s certainly way more active than he was at his previous owners’ home, where he was in a tiny cage with a single dowel perch and no toys. I just wonder sometimes how long his little body can keep going, given where we started from, and how to get him more active without asking too much of him.