Oil-Dri as bedding or cage litter
Posted: Mon Feb 16, 2009 2:35 pm
I posted earlier about using Oil-Dri in the bottom trays of my cages. It is similar to kitty litter, yet not exactly the same. It is a fired-clay product sold in automotive places to absorb oil spills. It is also dusty, I'll be wiping up dust for weeks to come.
Heidi (hfentj) was at my house Saturday, and she noticed right away that the Oil-Dri had a sort of smell, and the air in the birdroom was very dry. I don't have a very good smeller, so had not noticed this, but I had mentioned to my doctor that I had this persistent dry cough. He chalked it up to allergies. This first happened last year, and may have been about the time that I first tried using the Oil-Dri, didn't really pay any attention, but that is when he first put me on allergy medication (I've never had allergies before).
I've also had a fairly lousy breeding season so far, with many clear eggs, DIS, tossed babies, dying handfeds, etc. Well, DUH, sometimes you just have to hit me over the head with a brick! I sit around and complain, but can't put two and two together.
I had already replaced half the Oil-Dri on my divided breeding cages that have two trays--one tray still had Oil-Dri, I placed coastal Bermuda hay in the other tray. That afternoon, I dumped all the rest of the Oil-Dri and replaced with newspaper. I kept the hay on one side of the breeding cages, but on cages that have juvies or non-breeding birds, I didn't want to stimulate breeding behavior with all that nesting material.
The other big change was that when I had all the cages out in my backroom, I used a humidifier. I hadn't set it up in the bedroom that is now my birdroom--I have laminate flooring that is very sensitive to moisture, so I worried about having a humidifier going 24/7. So now I have the humidifier set up again.
I also stopped taking my allergy medication. This morning, I was not stopped up for the first time in quite a while. (Yay, that's one more pill I don't have to take--I hate pills!)
Heidi said that the Oil-Dri will pull moisture out of the air. Breeding is stimulated for most finches by the start of the rainy season, which gets the grasses growing and seeding up--and which is also a humid time of year.
Only time will tell if this is true, but it certainly makes sense to me--too bad I have trouble seeing the big picture sometimes! All the successful breeders keep saying that we must try to simulate the birds native environment as much as possible. I will update this thread when enough time has passed to tell is there is improvement.
Heidi (hfentj) was at my house Saturday, and she noticed right away that the Oil-Dri had a sort of smell, and the air in the birdroom was very dry. I don't have a very good smeller, so had not noticed this, but I had mentioned to my doctor that I had this persistent dry cough. He chalked it up to allergies. This first happened last year, and may have been about the time that I first tried using the Oil-Dri, didn't really pay any attention, but that is when he first put me on allergy medication (I've never had allergies before).
I've also had a fairly lousy breeding season so far, with many clear eggs, DIS, tossed babies, dying handfeds, etc. Well, DUH, sometimes you just have to hit me over the head with a brick! I sit around and complain, but can't put two and two together.
I had already replaced half the Oil-Dri on my divided breeding cages that have two trays--one tray still had Oil-Dri, I placed coastal Bermuda hay in the other tray. That afternoon, I dumped all the rest of the Oil-Dri and replaced with newspaper. I kept the hay on one side of the breeding cages, but on cages that have juvies or non-breeding birds, I didn't want to stimulate breeding behavior with all that nesting material.
The other big change was that when I had all the cages out in my backroom, I used a humidifier. I hadn't set it up in the bedroom that is now my birdroom--I have laminate flooring that is very sensitive to moisture, so I worried about having a humidifier going 24/7. So now I have the humidifier set up again.
I also stopped taking my allergy medication. This morning, I was not stopped up for the first time in quite a while. (Yay, that's one more pill I don't have to take--I hate pills!)
Heidi said that the Oil-Dri will pull moisture out of the air. Breeding is stimulated for most finches by the start of the rainy season, which gets the grasses growing and seeding up--and which is also a humid time of year.
Only time will tell if this is true, but it certainly makes sense to me--too bad I have trouble seeing the big picture sometimes! All the successful breeders keep saying that we must try to simulate the birds native environment as much as possible. I will update this thread when enough time has passed to tell is there is improvement.