Does open mouth gesture always indicate problem?
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- Pip
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Does open mouth gesture always indicate problem?
When I got my two finches, they were both treated for Air Sac Mites because one was fluffy and seemed to have trouble breathing (I think it was Ivermectine (sp?) and it was two application). Anyway, they are both healthy now but I continue to observe open mouth gesture occasionally. Does open mouth (it looks like the bird is yawning) always indicate mites?
- tammieb
- Brooding
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I have seen birds do this when stressed. Are your birds flighty? Some are more calm than others, if yours are displaying this behavior while flitting about the cage then I wouldn't worry about it.
TammieB.
Use the talents you possess - for the woods would be a very silent place if no birds sang except for the best. ~Henry Van Dyke~
Use the talents you possess - for the woods would be a very silent place if no birds sang except for the best. ~Henry Van Dyke~
- TammyS
- Callow Courter
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I agree with TammieB - when birds are stressed they breathe with their mouths (beaks) open. Mine do that after I am in the cage trying to catch one of them.
They also do it when they are hot. I see them in the nest during the summer time "panting".
They also do it when they are hot. I see them in the nest during the summer time "panting".
Tammy
www.JustBirdStuff.com
www.JustBirdStuff.com
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- kenny
- Weaning
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- Pip
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Thank you!!
That makes a lot of sense. Apart from cleaning cages, I only observed this in Ginger when he is placed with the other zebra in one cage (because he gets picked on by Peppermint, the other zeb). Then I observe it in the other zebra when he's alone in his own cage (because he wants to play with Ginger)
I'm really facing a dillema! I'm hoping to reintroduce them in a couple of weeks and hope that they'll get used to each other. If not, I may consider trading one for a hen so they can both be happy.
I'm really facing a dillema! I'm hoping to reintroduce them in a couple of weeks and hope that they'll get used to each other. If not, I may consider trading one for a hen so they can both be happy.
- kenny
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if you seperate both birds for awhile and then put them both back in the same cage they should not fight...providing there is nothing to fight over e.g. a female or a nest even though there is not a female in the cage they will fight over a nest its just the pecking order coming in to play
ken
ken
you can always tell a yorkshireman,but you cant tell him much
- tammieb
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- Pip
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Thanks for the advice
Yes, their cages are next to each other. I removed the nest from both cages after the first sign of aggression. The more bossy one (Peppermint) is in a smaller breeder cage and Ginger is in the 30 inch cage. Ginger's completely happy alone but Peppermint is stressed (sitting more on cage floor, losing interest in egg food, and spending all day trying to get to the other cage instead of flying around and getting his exercise). He returns to his energetic self the last time I put them together in the same cage after a 10 day separation. I separated them again because Ginger hasn't regrow all of the feathers and I observed Pepperming plucking at the less feathery spots. I'm going to separate them for 2 weeks so all Ginger's feathers can grow back. If they don't get along, I will try a 1 month separation before going into the last resort of finding one of them a new home.