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When Teddy Bird started plucking

 

It's one of those things that you honestly, sincerely tell yourself: "Well, it will never happen to me. I'm an experienced bird owner. I've owned birds of one kind or another for almost 40 years. I've read all the books.

I belong to a club. I have a good vet. I know what I'm doing. I'll never have a picking (plucking) bird." And then it happens ... feathers start appearing on the cage floor when it's not the right time for a molt. Too many feathers appear on the floor of the cage. Then a patch of pinkish/whitish skin appears where before there were green or gray feathers.

And you get this sick, sick feeling at the bottom of your stomach: "Oh-oh!
She's not plucking, is she?" But you know, deep, deep down inside that indeed, your bird is plucking. Since Teddy Bird is one of the List's star pluckers, I'll try to make a few observations:

First things first: for almost all of you, this will just be an academically interesting (hopefully) article. The vast, vast majorities of companion birds (including Quakers) do not pluck. But for some mysterious reason (or reasons) some birds do pluck. To define terms, plucking or picking is the same thing - the bird fixates on pulling out healthy feathers until a bald spot appears. The much more serious problem, self-mutilation, involves the bird actually biting or tearing its own tissue or muscle, causing a wound. I'm not going to discuss self-mutilation.

If you ever have to wonder: "Hey! Is my Quaker plucking?!" Then he/she is probably not. You will know. Believe me, you will know. Right now, and for the past three years, Teddy looks like Daffy Duck after Elmer Fudd has shot him. It's unfortunately very easy to tell the difference between a molt, even an extreme molt, and feather plucking.

In most bird owners' experience, a molt occurs about once or twice a year, and the most noticeable feature about a molt is the slightly increased daily amount of feathers on the cage floor. The old feathers are pushed out by the new feathers coming in - helped along by the bird's natural preening.

The loss of feathers in a moult is almost always asynchronous (one from each side of the body - so that in the wild the bird is balanced and can still
fly.) The bird many times looks a little raggedy, but there is no bareness
- a PG-13 bird as opposed to an NC-17 plucker.

On the other hand, plucking is a continuous process where the bird pulls out many, many feathers to the point of denuding itself. Full frontal nudity - or at least bald patches. Teddy began and continues her plucking very slowly. The first time, at 6 months age, she plucked her lower breast and legs in the classic "brood patch" that some female birds use to keep their eggs warm in the nest. The second and unfortunately so far permanent time, she has plucked her crop, all of her breast and belly, her legs, most of her back, and the top coverts of her wings. Teddy still has a beautiful head of feathers - in some ways, it looks as if she is wearing a helmet. That's a classic sign of plucking - the bird can't get to the feathers on its head.

The onset of plucking happened very slowly, over a course of four or five weeks. Teddy will pluck when she is alone, with Bilbo, or when she is with me. There are times when I'll be holding her, and probably only giving her half my attention, and she will give a slight squawk and hand (beak?) me a still-sheathed new feather. Of course, that gets me upset, and maybe that's the response she wants.

Now, what in the world have we done for poor Old Teddy Bird? Teddy's vet is an Avian Diplomate. He came very highly recommended from my local Bird Club. I think that he knows birds and how to treat them. The first time he saw Teddy, he walked into the examining room and said: "Ho Ho! Another plucking Quaker! What a surprise!" The vet said that Quakers are a species that are prone to plucking - he thinks because they are such communal, social birds, and the lack of interaction can throw some birds off. (That's one of the reasons we bought Bilbo - a companion bird of another species [Meyers Parrot], but so far, Bilbo's presence hasn't helped Teddy's plucking.)

The vet said that he would not recommend a collar for plucking - that a collar would only intensify Teddy's frustrations. He did have Teddy DNA
sexed: Indeed she is female. With that information, he started Teddy on a series of male hormone shots - in case the plucking was the result of sexual frustration. Teddy received one injection and then came back for a second injection 21 days later. She finished up with a third injection 7 days after the second shot. No luck. No change.

We took the next step after Teddy pulled a blood feather and covered her cage (and herself) in blood. No mutilation, but the vet gave us a bottle of liquid Valium and instructions to give her .05 cc's in the morning and the evening. That continued for over a month, with no change in the plucking, although Teddy was a tad more accepting of SWMBO - her sworn enemy.

After the end of the Valium Experiment, we tried a series of herbal, holistic remedies. Bonnie Doane, in her book "My Parrot, My Friend" had mentioned some success with Pycynogenol (a pine bark extract) as a treatment for plucking. I had mentioned Pycynogenol to our vet, and he said that he had heard of it and that it was worth a try. "Keep me informed on what happens." We agreed that an attempt to use Pycynogenol couldn't hurt, but he personally did not hold out much hope. Every time we have left his office, his last words have been that we may well have to get used to living with a plucking Quaker, and that aside from the plucking, Teddy was happy, healthy, and well adjusted.

So, we tried the Pycynogenol, morning and night, for 60 days. It didn't work. Nothing. No change. Then, I went on and tried St. John's Wort for 60 days. No luck. Finally, I tried Kava Kava for 60 days. No luck. I'm willing to try any other remedy that sounds promising, but at this stage, the vet and I believe that Teddy has destroyed many of her feather follicles and will never re-grow all of her feathers, even if she did stop plucking.

So, there we are. Teddy continues to pluck. She looks awful. But beyond her looks, she appears to be happy, lively, intelligent, and everything that we all look for in a companion bird. She's a closet talker - talks mostly when no one else is around - but she always amazes me with what she can say.

She's part of our family, and here she will stay. I just want to close by restating that the great, great majority of Quakers (and all companion
birds) do not pluck. So, this article should not dissuade folks from adopting a Quaker. I will be very happy when someone comes up with a cure for whatever is causing Teddy Bird's plucking, but until then, I guess that I will have to be the pretty one in the relationship.

John D.

 

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