Plucking behaviour african grey

bjorn.k

New member
Sep 2, 2024
6
4
Parrots
African grey
Hey all,

I joined this forum today because of the issues my African grey Eevee currently has. if you have any helpfull comments or any tip or even tricks i would love to hear them.



Chronological time order:

Parrot started plucking 3 weeks ago, and ofcourse i went to the vet the check if nothing was wrong with here medically speaking. At the vet they told me that they have the idea that Eevee was hand fed and raised which is now forbidden in The Netherlands. Everything was checked and a medical reason was ruled out by them. furthermore Eevee just turned 3 years old and they told me that this is a comen phenomenon with african grey when they are hand vet

And so came the questions from the vet in regards to routine. So to completely inform you all i shall write that down aswell.

My parrot goes to bed at 9 Pm every evening and wakes up at 7 Am every day. From 7 Am till 8 she can do whatever she wants outside of the cage. At 8 Am i go to work till 4 Pm. When i am back at 4 i take here out of here cage and she is out of here cage till bed time at 9 Pm. All here toys within here cage are swapped weekly and the food that i give is Harrisons. Ofcourse every now and then a treat inbetween.

I noticed in the last week that she only plucks when she is going into here cage when its bedtime. And she does this within her sleeping cage and also in her normally cage.

I already tried alot hopefully some of you have some helpfull information
 
As you can see in this concurrent thread plucking is truly the great equalizer, cruel and mysterious.
I made a heart-felt reply there that applies to you, too, I think.
YOU ARE DOING SO MANY THNGS RIGHT! My only idea for you might be to try to let your bird have a natural light schedule, up at dawn, down at dusk... that gives a "natural" light. schedule for feathers, mating urges, etc. But hey, my bird has always had that and he started to puck with a new drug!
Please know we are all with you. I recommend a lot of talk and listening, and use of the excellent search engine.
Stay with us. :)
 
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You are both completely right! i will tryto slowly incorporate the light shedule maybe it works
 
Hi- I would vary her food incorporating some fruits, veggies- no avocados, no chocolate. They like apples, cherries, blueberries, grapes, pomegranates, edamame, peas, carrots, sweet potatoes, pasta without sauces. When you go out, do you leave a radio on? They like to hear something otherwise, they construe silence or quiet as danger.
Try spritzing her at least 1x a week. They love showers. Maybe she has dry skin.
It could be she misses you. Birds are social beings and love being around others. For them to be alone is difficult. Hope this helps her :)
 
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Hi- I would vary her food incorporating some fruits, veggies- no avocados, no chocolate. They like apples, cherries, blueberries, grapes, pomegranates, edamame, peas, carrots, sweet potatoes, pasta without sauces. When you go out, do you leave a radio on? They like to hear something otherwise, they construe silence or quiet as danger.
Try spritzing her at least 1x a week. They love showers. Maybe she has dry skin.
It could be she misses you. Birds are social beings and love being around others. For them to be alone is difficult. Hope this helps her :)

Hey, first of all thank you for your reply.

Thanks for all your remarks and considerations! i always keep an radio on when i shower she always joins. i did not change much in the last few motnhs but she is growing back some feathers.

it is getting there but i shall have to be patient.
 
Hey, first of all thank you for your reply.

Thanks for all your remarks and considerations! i always keep an radio on when i shower she always joins. i did not change much in the last few motnhs but she is growing back some feathers.

it is getting there but i shall have to be patient.
Hey Bjorn- it's a process of elimination what the underlying cause may be. Sometimes, it's hormonal, dietary, behavioral or underlying disease process for example. If she's growing a few feathers back then it may improve.
 
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Hey Bjorn- it's a process of elimination what the underlying cause may be. Sometimes, it's hormonal, dietary, behavioral or underlying disease process for example. If she's growing a few feathers back then it may improve.
True, in the whole time span i only changed one thing hopefully that is it. i now have an african grey who is big and fluffy :)
 
Iā€™m sorry you have a parrot who is feather plucking. Itā€™s a very perplexing issue. I know my parrots vet recommended spray baths, changing out toys/perches in the cage, diet, and such to try to help with this.
 
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Iā€™m sorry you have a parrot who is feather plucking. Itā€™s a very perplexing issue. I know my parrots vet recommended spray baths, changing out toys/perches in the cage, diet, and such to try to help with this.
it is getting better currently as i wrote above:

True, in the whole time span i only changed one thing hopefully that is it. i now have an african grey who is big and fluffy

nevertheless all tips are welcome
 
Bella my CAG is a plucker also.

I wish there was some secret fix but if so I havenā€™t found it.

Bella was a rescue and came to me/us as a plucker.

I have seen (on YouTube) numerous African greyā€™s that are extremely well cared for and yet develop plucking issues.

Bella goes through periods of time where she will pluck.
Sometimes in her cage at night.
In the am when I change out food/water I will find a small bunch of feathers in one bowl or another.
Sometimes I will see herā€¦ā€¦ aggressively grooming is what I call it. Almost like she is angry at them.
When this happens I do my best to give her a mist bath.
She doesnā€™t like taking a bath unless itā€™s her idea so this doesnā€™t always amount to much.
 
it is getting better currently as i wrote above:

True, in the whole time span i only changed one thing hopefully that is it. i now have an african grey who is big and fluffy

nevertheless all tips are welcome
Iā€™m very happy to hear that things are improving. I adopted my parrot, and from my understanding heā€™d been feather plucking for years. It probably started out as a skin infection or something that went on. From what Iā€™ve gathered once feather plucking becomes habitual itā€™s close to impossible to address. Iā€™m glad you were able to address it right away.
 
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Hey,

Thanks everyone for responding! I shall keep it in check. And if Eevee improves any further i shall write a complete story about what happend and how i hopefully (solved) it. I keep you all in the loop and hopefully someone else can use this as a guidance
 

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