EllenD
New member
- Aug 20, 2016
- 3,979
- 68
- Parrots
- Senegal Parrot named "Kane"; Yellow-Sided Green Cheek Conure named "Bowie"; Blue Quaker Parrot named "Lita Ford"; Cockatiel named "Duff"; 8 American/English Budgie Hybrids; Ringneck Dove named "Dylan"
I hope you got my PM response; We had our first huge snow here Thursday night into yesterday morning, and we got nearly a foot of snow here in Happy Valley (yeah right, lol)...So of course PennDot was not prepared or ready to go at all, and I didn't see a plow come down College Avenue/Rt. 26, the 12 mile long road running through one end of State College right out the other end, until around 11:00 a.m. yesterday morning, as I was walking down the hill to Burger King to get a cup of coffee because I was out and my fast yet LOW Mitsubishi Lancer Evo was "beached" in my driveway...So all of State College pretty much shut-down from Thursday around 4:00 p.m. until this morning. Yesterday I called my CAV and his office was closed, but I emailed him and got his automated "I'll be back in the office on Monday" email, so he's plowing his huge property (he lives on a farm-type of property in Amish country)...So I am going to call him first thing Monday morning and see if we can figure out how to set this up...
How is Cairo doing now? Is he eating/drinking without vomiting it back up? I'm really thinking that just having you back home is going to at the very least reduce his general stress greatly, and birds and stress don't mix well at all. So hopefully he'll be able to relax, rest peacefully, and have much more of an appetite now that you're home. That in and of itself can make all the difference in the world.
Keep us posted, and PM me once you speak to your Vet about doing a consult with my CAV...***Also, if for whatever reason your Vet has hesitation or a problem with doing a consult with a CAV in the US that she doesn't know, or for whatever reason, by all means encourage her to please do a consult with ANY EXPERIENCED CAV that she fells comfortable speaking to...I'm sure that she probably knows some CAV's if she's been an Exotics Vet for any length of time, or she at least "knows of" some CAV's, so if there is any sort of issue with her speaking to a US doctor or whatever, then try to do your best to get her to agree to do a consult with ANY CAV that she is willing to do so with. While you don't want to "offend" your Vet, nor make her feel incompetent or like you're unappreciative, she knows that she is not an Avian Specialist but rather an Exotics Vet, and that Avian Specialists ONLY see and treat birds/parrots, and that they have much education and training in Avian medicine that she has never had, along with most of them having done Internships and/or Fellowships with other very experienced Avian Specialists. So hopefully she'll be open to doing a consult with an Avian Specialist and understanding that time is of the essence when it comes to birds.
How is Cairo doing now? Is he eating/drinking without vomiting it back up? I'm really thinking that just having you back home is going to at the very least reduce his general stress greatly, and birds and stress don't mix well at all. So hopefully he'll be able to relax, rest peacefully, and have much more of an appetite now that you're home. That in and of itself can make all the difference in the world.
Keep us posted, and PM me once you speak to your Vet about doing a consult with my CAV...***Also, if for whatever reason your Vet has hesitation or a problem with doing a consult with a CAV in the US that she doesn't know, or for whatever reason, by all means encourage her to please do a consult with ANY EXPERIENCED CAV that she fells comfortable speaking to...I'm sure that she probably knows some CAV's if she's been an Exotics Vet for any length of time, or she at least "knows of" some CAV's, so if there is any sort of issue with her speaking to a US doctor or whatever, then try to do your best to get her to agree to do a consult with ANY CAV that she is willing to do so with. While you don't want to "offend" your Vet, nor make her feel incompetent or like you're unappreciative, she knows that she is not an Avian Specialist but rather an Exotics Vet, and that Avian Specialists ONLY see and treat birds/parrots, and that they have much education and training in Avian medicine that she has never had, along with most of them having done Internships and/or Fellowships with other very experienced Avian Specialists. So hopefully she'll be open to doing a consult with an Avian Specialist and understanding that time is of the essence when it comes to birds.