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Poorly cockatiel...
7 Answers
My very old cockatiel fell off his perch last night. He couldn’t get up and spent the night on the floor of the aviary, fluffed up in a corner. His vent and cere are both clean, his droppings look normal and he’s showing no signs of laboured breathing, so I guessed that he was slipping away due to old age (I rescued him 15+ years ago and had no idea how old he was even then).
He was not looking at all good when I left him this morning, still on the aviary floor, and I thought I’d find him dead when I came home at teatime. To my surprise, he seemed fine – he’d managed to climb all the way up to the top perch of the aviary (I’d put in a few very low perches last night as I know how much birds like to perch up). He was eating for England too.
Any idea what might have caused him to fall from the perch and be unable to get back up please peeps? I did wonder if he’d had a stroke, but if he had, would he have recovered so quickly? And would he be able to climb the bars so soon after a stroke?
I’d rather not take him to a vet as in the past I have had birds die in my hands at the vets due to the stress of being handled. I don’t like the thought of him being in pain, but surely he wouldn’t be eating so much if he felt that bad? I know that birds are very good at hiding illness, but to look at him at the moment, you wouldn’t believe he was “on his last legs” last night.
He was not looking at all good when I left him this morning, still on the aviary floor, and I thought I’d find him dead when I came home at teatime. To my surprise, he seemed fine – he’d managed to climb all the way up to the top perch of the aviary (I’d put in a few very low perches last night as I know how much birds like to perch up). He was eating for England too.
Any idea what might have caused him to fall from the perch and be unable to get back up please peeps? I did wonder if he’d had a stroke, but if he had, would he have recovered so quickly? And would he be able to climb the bars so soon after a stroke?
I’d rather not take him to a vet as in the past I have had birds die in my hands at the vets due to the stress of being handled. I don’t like the thought of him being in pain, but surely he wouldn’t be eating so much if he felt that bad? I know that birds are very good at hiding illness, but to look at him at the moment, you wouldn’t believe he was “on his last legs” last night.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.15(+goodness knows) is a good age for a cockatiel. With clean vent/droppings it doesn't have a cold or flu. The fact that it is now eating well is the best sign you could have hoped for. I doubt if a Vet could at this stage diagnose what happened, let alone fix it. It could have been a heart attack or as you said, a stroke. As he looks well to you I would in this case let nature take its course.
You sound like a pretty level headed person and to keep the bird alive for 15 years is an achievement in itself. Go with your gut feeling.
You sound like a pretty level headed person and to keep the bird alive for 15 years is an achievement in itself. Go with your gut feeling.