T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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203.1 | mine too | CHET::MACDONALD | | Wed Jun 21 1989 10:04 | 10 |
| Did your birds happen to come from someone in Keene, NH. i bought
a female earlier this year that has the same problem. I've been
keeping an eye on it as I was concerned it may have been mites,
however she seems to be fine, nothing has spread on her or to her
cage mate. It is difficult to make vet appointments due to work
schedules but I will be taking both birds in for routine check ups
while I'm on vacation. Let me know if you find out anything about
your bird.
thanks
MaryAnne
|
203.2 | From Milford | GIAENG::PULSIFER | Doug Pulsifer 296-3332 | Wed Jun 21 1989 10:18 | 8 |
| The budgies came from a home in Milford N.H.
Another of my budgies had scaly mites when I bought her a year ago and
the mites infested her feet and the skin on the sides of the beak, but
not the cere. I treated here with a mite spray and it cleared up.
If it appears to spread I will try it again.
Doug
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203.3 | Mites | GIAENG::PULSIFER | Doug Pulsifer 296-3332 | Wed Jun 21 1989 12:45 | 15 |
| I just had some more help over the tube. She suggested that it probably
is a parasite and that I apply my pyretherin with a Q-tip followed
with corn or olive oil. Be sure not to cover the breathing holes
though. The oil all by itself may be enough, but I will use both
to be sure. The oil will help to soften up the cere.
To find out if the mites are there you cover the cage with a white
sheet at night. In the morning you may find them on the sheet. I
have heard that the Mite Protectors they sell in pet store are
hazardous to the birds.
It was also suggested that I put the birds on Tetracycline for three
days to help with the stress.
Doug
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203.4 | Larr had the same thing. | WILKIE::OLOUGHLIN | | Thu Jun 22 1989 10:33 | 22 |
|
Okay, so all you folks are pretty well informed and I'm new to all
this, but...
Our budgie had the very same thing. I was very concerned about
it because I couldn't tell the difference between scaly mite and
a normal cere. For young birds it's easy, it should be fleshy.
My problem was Larr (the bugie) was mature. I went to alot of books
to see what a *normal* cere was for a mature budgie. There were
many pictures of budgies with a scale, or maybe flakey, ceres.
Because I was considering a partner for Larr, I went to the vet
for a check up. The vet said it wasn't scaley mite. The vet had
me mist Larr every morning. The cere has cleared up. I guess he
wasn't getting enough moister.
So first get a cheap bottle that will make a mist. Fill it with
warm water and mist him/here every morning.
Rick.
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203.5 | Forgot. I should take 5-7 days to clear. | WILKIE::OLOUGHLIN | | Thu Jun 22 1989 10:35 | 1 |
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203.6 | BEAK MITES OR A LIVER DISEASE MAYBE? | SVCRUS::BUCCIERI | | Mon Jul 10 1989 13:31 | 11 |
| Well better late than never ...... I had adopted two budgies and
one had a deformed cere. Fearing that it was mites I immediately
took him to the vet. Well thirty bucks later the prognosis was
that this bird either has beak mites or a liver disease. The vet
gave him an oral medication and said that if the cere did not
return to normal that he definitely had a liver disease. Well the
cere looks the same way and it has been a while so I guess it is
his liver. I hope this helps.
|
203.7 | All better now, thanks. | GIAENG::PULSIFER | Doug Pulsifer 296-3332 | Tue Jul 11 1989 08:56 | 7 |
| I applied the oil with pyretherin once and then the oil alone once
more. I also misted her a few times. All of the build-up has now
come off. I don't beleive it was mites just some sort of build-up,
maybe food or water and vitamins.
Doug
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