Do you name all your birds?

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GouldieFledge
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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by GouldieFledge » Wed Mar 23, 2016 7:40 pm

Looks like I'm the only one who doesn't name them! Maybe it's time to start.

The only gouldian I have that has a nickname is "Ed". It's a reference to the dumb hyena in The Lion King movie. He always butted into my pair that were raising a single baby; feeding it, sitting, eventually taking over as 2nd dad. And he sings his heart out all day long to no one at all, because no one will ever give him the time of day. :lol:

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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by Maleficum » Thu Mar 24, 2016 4:36 am

slwatson

I also use favourite books and tv-shows to name my pets, especially if there is a litter I name.

My first bunny litter got named: Sirius, Lupin, Bellatrix, Narcissa, Luna, Ginevra, Lavender, Ariana, Nymphadora and little Dobby (who sadly died when he/she was only two weeks old), sounds familiar? ;)

The dog living with me is named Fjant, it kind of means Wimp in Swedish and it really suites him ;)

My brothers parrot is named Amigo but we call him Kråkan (Crow).
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slwatson
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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by slwatson » Thu Mar 24, 2016 3:37 pm

Magnificent BirdMan

My sons would love to see your spider...NOT ME THOUGH! I actually don't have a problem with most spiders, except the brown recluse and black widow, since they're poisonous and live in my area. I don't like daddy long legs though...their legs freak me out!
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Stinch
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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by Stinch » Thu Mar 24, 2016 5:39 pm

Venemous not poisonous. :lol: I really don't spiders with spindly legs (I don't touch them, so creepy.) or that I cannot identify if it has a dangerous venom or one that might harm someone/me. I would get a tarantula or another jumping spider, but the spiders I want rear up showing aggression or they are nearly impossible to find OR they are really timid. Peppermint escaped her little container, she was adorable while she was here. Cellar Spiders and Solifugids freak me out the most. I also got some moth eggs in a jar from a moth that I captured last night, the moth died after she layed the eggs. She seems to be a moth from the Bena genus, but they're from Europe and not South America. Which confuses me a bit unless they're an invasive species or something.

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slwatson
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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by slwatson » Fri Mar 25, 2016 3:15 pm

Magnificent BirdMan

I grew up around tarantulas from living in the country. I actually kind of liked them, I guess because there were so big, they were easy to see :wink: I'm always on the look out for them when I go home for visits in the summer.
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slwatson
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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by slwatson » Fri Mar 25, 2016 3:15 pm

Maleficum

I forgot about Dobby! I'll have to save that name for my next addition :D
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Sojourner
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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by Sojourner » Tue Apr 05, 2016 10:00 pm

slwatson

When I lived in Puerto Rico, I actually got a cat specifically to go after the FLYING ROACHES!!!!! Calling them "palmetto bugs" doesn't NOT make them roaches, LOL!

And they were about the size of mice. *shudder*

X_X

There were slugs in PR as well, on about the same scale as the roaches. I came home one afternoon to find an aptly named banana slug sliming its way up the side of the house one day, LOL!

However for true fear and horror, there are the centipedes. Not the relativily innocuous ones those of us from less tropical climes may be accustomed to - these are again gargantuan in scale relative to what we usually see.

And they're poisonous, and they have hooks on their 100 little feetsies so as the better to hang on and sting you to death. And they are armored. A machete is not necessarily up to the tax of chopping them up expeditiously. and trust me, you WANT such a process to be expedited! LOL!

OK, maybe not to death if you are a healthy adult. But they do leave some nasty scars as well.

On a more birdly note, PR is where I got my first cockatiel. Well, my son did, actually. We had to leave him behind due to quarantine regulations.

And I STILL haven't named my pair of budgies. Stubborn I and Stubborn II come to mind. Because that's how they're being about eating their veggies, or rather NOT, LOL!
Molly Brown 11/22/15
Pyewacket 6/15/17
Trudy 2/24/18

Turn towards home, and go there. Many overs, over woods and fields, streams and hills, many overs. Just turn towards home. How else would one go there? Perhaps it was a dream, and you have awakened from it. May the earth rise up beneath you, with home in your heart, and your person waiting.

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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by Paul's Amazing Birds » Wed Apr 06, 2016 12:27 am

I have quite a few birds that are all special to me but I only named one. Stevie-Ray came to me as part of a package deal free of charge from a professional breeder who told me this was an exceptional soft feather Red Factor Canary but he was older and because of an accident, he had only one eye.

Well Stevie-Ray turned out to be an excellent stud bird for two years and without a doubt, my best singer. In his 12th year he finally lost sight in his other eye and could no longer find food or gain altitude in the open flight.

So I gave him his own apartment with plenty of floor-level perches, a private bathtub and all his favorite foods within easy reach. He's been doing fine for the past 18 months and still strikes up a nice long song - sometimes at 10 o'clock at night #-o. His space is at one end of my work desk in the garage which is within singing distance to a rather large quarantine cage and ICU. I did some sound experiments with this little guy and it turns out that he responds best and actually breaks into long arias when paired with male tenor opera singers.

Still a happy bird... and one of my favorites.

Paul
Favorite hobby is continuing to improve on a landscaped, weather protected, 500 sq ft mixed aviary with 23 fascinating species. 30 years in the making; currently have
19 different Finch species, 2 types of Doves, plus 23 Button Quail and 30 pair of clear Red Factor Canaries.

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slwatson
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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by slwatson » Wed Apr 06, 2016 11:41 am

Sojourner

I read that part about the flying "palmetto bugs" and I haven't stopped getting the chills since! :shock: They absolutely creep me out!

The centipedes you mentioned would scare me too....and I have a bad story about a red headed centipede. My family and I grew up in Texas kind of in the country, and we commonly found brown recluse spiders, black widows, scorpions, rattlesnakes, and water moccasins on our property. My mom was in the kitchen one day and screamed and called my name, and when I ran in, there was a red headed centipede on her dish towel. Neither of us had ever seen one, so needless to say, we were horrified!!!
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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by Sojourner » Tue Apr 12, 2016 10:17 pm

slwatson

Fortunately the redheaded centipede isn't particularly poisonous (unless you are unfortunate enough to have an allergy, like some people have to wasps or bees).

But Scolopendra gigantea is huge, eats mice and birds and anything else it can catch on the ground (say, kittens or small puppies).

It is poisonous enough that it has been known to kill small children, elderly persons, or people who are ill. It's sting/bite is very painful, but equally painful (and potentially scarring) are the hooks it grabs onto you with if frightened.

They are fast and dangerous. They are often found hiding in closets, clothes, shoes. They are the bane of agricultural workers, especially he guys who have to haul around the big stems of bananas. They often sling those up on their bare backs and there are a variety of insects and arthropods that hide out in those and will bite.

I only ever saw one in the house but that was quite enough for me, thank you! Another time one tried to crawl in the window of the car while I was driving. My son screamed and I looked and saw it waving the upper part of its body around, ready to dive inside. I screamed at my son to roll up the window, which he did VERY RAPIDLY INDEED!

Pulled off the road into a bar parking lot. A guy came over to see what we were screaming about and saw the thing waving around - it's tail was stuck in the window somehow. He managed to knock it off the car and tried to stomp it to death, and then it seemed it just DISAPPEARED! Couldn't find it anywhere. THey are SUPER fast so probably it scuttled away across the dark parking lot. Finally he shrugged, smiled (he spoke no English and in the panic all of my paltry Spanish had disappeared) and went on into the bar.

When we got home, I made my son sit in the car while I got out first and checked to make sure it wasn't crawling up the side of the car from underneath or something. Then I had him open the car door and I LIFTED HIM OUT to be sure.

I still occasionally have flashbacks, wondering if the thing had managed to crawl up the guy's pants leg without being noticed and then viciously stung him after he went inside. I know that's HIGHLY unlikely, but I've never been able to disabuse myself of the notion that he ended up getting hurt for trying to help a total stranger out like that.

Now that I have induced the horrors and heebie jeebies of these things into a whole lot of people who by now wish they'd never ever heard of them, my work is done! LOL!

Still no names for my parakeets. I fear they shall forever remain nameless. I refuse to name them until they start eating their veggies! Naughty birds!

EDIT: So I just went and looked up MORE information about the Texas Redheaded Centipede, and it turns out it is very nearly as bad as the Giant Centipedes in PR and around the Caribbean. The first article I read implied they weren't "that bad", but they're ALMOST that bad. Bad enough in and of themselves.

Lets hope we never have to see either sort again, what?
Molly Brown 11/22/15
Pyewacket 6/15/17
Trudy 2/24/18

Turn towards home, and go there. Many overs, over woods and fields, streams and hills, many overs. Just turn towards home. How else would one go there? Perhaps it was a dream, and you have awakened from it. May the earth rise up beneath you, with home in your heart, and your person waiting.

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slwatson
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Re: Do you name all your birds?

Post by slwatson » Wed Apr 13, 2016 12:28 pm

Sojourner

I've got the chills again thinking about your centipede :shock: What a nightmare!!!!!
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