Phew! Close Call!
Posted: Tue Oct 28, 2014 5:07 am
One of my little gouldian babies scared the h3ll out of me yesterday.
They're in a 30x18x18 Petco cage. Lots of you have the same one.
There's a big middle door with a smaller door inside the big door. When you open the big door, sometimes the small one gets caught open.
I didn't notice it, but one baby had escaped the cage. I opened the door to the bird room and he flew up -- and before I could react to block him - right out past my head and into my great room -- a dangerous place with 16 cats wandering about and a whizzing ceiling fan!
So I'm frantically tossing cats into bedrooms and bathrooms, trying to get them all locked out of the great room. I figured I could get them cleared out faster than I could catch the bird with my high ceilings.
Incredibly, I got it done! I miraculously cleared the room of cats in under a minute! Not a single close call that I saw. He hung out on the one cat-inaccessible plant shelf above the bird room.
In five years, this has NEVER happened.
Usually, when there are birds flying free, I enter via the bathroom that interconnects to the bird room. It serves as a catch.
I've had large birds who let themselves out of the cage, but they're big and it's usually obvious that they're out and about.
This guy was sitting amidst the greenery on top of his cage, which is about 6 feet away from the door.
Thank goodness I don't clip their wings!
That's why I have a no-clip policy in my house. They'll need those wings if they ever get out of the bird room!
The real shocker was how long it took me to catch this guy!
He's a juvenile, about 6 weeks old now. He hasn't spent much time out of the cage. Only a couple days of free fly before I realized the parents were incubating (and when I have an incubating couple or chicks, I don't open that cage during free fly, as they tend to explore each others' cages and I don't want others disturbing them.)
But this guy was whizzing around like nobody's business for a good 10 minutes! And he was very good at evading my net.
I don't know where he got those strong flying muscles or the incredible agility. Usually the young ones tire within a minute or two and you catch them with ease. But not this little dude!
Thank *goodness* everything worked out nicely!
I guess I learned my lesson. No more entering via the french doors and double check the doors on those white cages!
They're in a 30x18x18 Petco cage. Lots of you have the same one.
There's a big middle door with a smaller door inside the big door. When you open the big door, sometimes the small one gets caught open.
I didn't notice it, but one baby had escaped the cage. I opened the door to the bird room and he flew up -- and before I could react to block him - right out past my head and into my great room -- a dangerous place with 16 cats wandering about and a whizzing ceiling fan!
So I'm frantically tossing cats into bedrooms and bathrooms, trying to get them all locked out of the great room. I figured I could get them cleared out faster than I could catch the bird with my high ceilings.
Incredibly, I got it done! I miraculously cleared the room of cats in under a minute! Not a single close call that I saw. He hung out on the one cat-inaccessible plant shelf above the bird room.
In five years, this has NEVER happened.
Usually, when there are birds flying free, I enter via the bathroom that interconnects to the bird room. It serves as a catch.
I've had large birds who let themselves out of the cage, but they're big and it's usually obvious that they're out and about.
This guy was sitting amidst the greenery on top of his cage, which is about 6 feet away from the door.
Thank goodness I don't clip their wings!
That's why I have a no-clip policy in my house. They'll need those wings if they ever get out of the bird room!
The real shocker was how long it took me to catch this guy!
He's a juvenile, about 6 weeks old now. He hasn't spent much time out of the cage. Only a couple days of free fly before I realized the parents were incubating (and when I have an incubating couple or chicks, I don't open that cage during free fly, as they tend to explore each others' cages and I don't want others disturbing them.)
But this guy was whizzing around like nobody's business for a good 10 minutes! And he was very good at evading my net.
I don't know where he got those strong flying muscles or the incredible agility. Usually the young ones tire within a minute or two and you catch them with ease. But not this little dude!
Thank *goodness* everything worked out nicely!
I guess I learned my lesson. No more entering via the french doors and double check the doors on those white cages!