female zebra finch's weird symptons?
- HoangQuan
- Amateur Architect
- Posts: 467
- Joined: Fri Mar 13, 2009 7:08 am
- Location: Hochiminh City, Vietnam
- Contact:
female zebra finch's weird symptons?
I have a female zebra finch, and she's doing just fine eating, drinking, playing, and breeding as well. But now she has some very weird symtons: sleepy, puffy, inactive...I meant, those symtons aint weird, but she was very well this morning and the whole last 3 months but now she's looking like that. Yes I know that finches are very good at hiding their illness, but throught the months I coulndt find anything wrong with her and her mate(?).
This is not the first time she's looked like that, it is 2nd actually. some weeks ago she showed me exactly those symtons in the evening and then she was like perfectly normal the next morning(?!). I am starting to doub that, she did chew some plants in the aviary and that caused her sick! I am not sure about anything anymore, cuz every birds of mine always chew plants and there're nothing wrong with'em.(?) I have a bushy bamboo, some normal ferns, and Lantana camara plant in my aviary, I dont think they are poisoned plants.
Since this is not the first time, I am really confuse...If I just leave her alone in the aviary, will she get better the next morning( like the last time) or she will simply drop death? TT__TT
Have anyone stucked in the same situation? Can I have any advises?
This is not the first time she's looked like that, it is 2nd actually. some weeks ago she showed me exactly those symtons in the evening and then she was like perfectly normal the next morning(?!). I am starting to doub that, she did chew some plants in the aviary and that caused her sick! I am not sure about anything anymore, cuz every birds of mine always chew plants and there're nothing wrong with'em.(?) I have a bushy bamboo, some normal ferns, and Lantana camara plant in my aviary, I dont think they are poisoned plants.
Since this is not the first time, I am really confuse...If I just leave her alone in the aviary, will she get better the next morning( like the last time) or she will simply drop death? TT__TT
Have anyone stucked in the same situation? Can I have any advises?
Last edited by HoangQuan on Sun Apr 19, 2009 2:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
- dfcauley
- Molting
- Posts: 6892
- Joined: Sun Mar 23, 2008 9:28 am
- Location: Carrollton, Georgia
Re: famale zebra finch's weird symtons?
There is no way to tell what will happen. The best thing you could do is offer her some extra heat. Do you have avaible to you NV powder? If not you can offer them gatorade to think to help build up their electrolytes.
What do her droppings look like? If she appears sick, I would seperate her from the other birds.
What do her droppings look like? If she appears sick, I would seperate her from the other birds.
Donna
- HoangQuan
- Amateur Architect
- Posts: 467
- Joined: Fri Mar 13, 2009 7:08 am
- Location: Hochiminh City, Vietnam
- Contact:
- Finch Fry
- Expecting
- Posts: 1116
- Joined: Fri Jan 09, 2009 2:16 pm
- Location: Evansville, IN USA
Sounds like egg bound. If she is having flying issues and showing all of those symptoms.
I would suggest putting her in a tiny tiny cage and throwing a heat lamp on it and putting wet and warm towels around to increase humidity. Hopefully, if it is eggbinding, she passes the egg.
GL and keep us posted!!!
I would suggest putting her in a tiny tiny cage and throwing a heat lamp on it and putting wet and warm towels around to increase humidity. Hopefully, if it is eggbinding, she passes the egg.
GL and keep us posted!!!
Goulds, Owls, Gold Breasts, Stars, Zebras, Societies
An obscene number of chicks and eggs
And an incredibly rare St. Goldena Breast finch
Anyone want some finches???
-Chris
An obscene number of chicks and eggs
And an incredibly rare St. Goldena Breast finch
Anyone want some finches???
-Chris

- HoangQuan
- Amateur Architect
- Posts: 467
- Joined: Fri Mar 13, 2009 7:08 am
- Location: Hochiminh City, Vietnam
- Contact:
Finch fry, just like you, I think that those symtons may show the sign that she want to lay an egg, this is the first time this young zebra breeds, so I guess this is trouble with her very first eggs, and maybe things will get better tomorrow...My other Zebra always lay egg at night in the nest, so I wont notice if they have these symptons(I guess)
I am praying for her now, hope tomorrow I will see something excited, not miserable
I am praying for her now, hope tomorrow I will see something excited, not miserable

- franny
- Weaning
- Posts: 1631
- Joined: Fri Jul 25, 2008 5:19 pm
- Location: Winnipeg, MB. Canada
- Contact:
Do you have liquid calcium? My GB hen did appear a bit puffy a couple of nights, and was fine in the morning. I thought too, that it was the effort of getting ready to pass an egg. so the second evening when I noticed her puffy again, I gave her some liquid calcium. I doubled the usual dose in her waterer and watched for her to drink, then replaced the water with fresh, so as not to over do it. (I usually give only twice a week - but it appears that I should have maybe given a bit higher dose, so gave it to her as an extra dose.)
I didn't want to catch her and upset her. But shortly after she drank the water she did seem better, and it didn't happen again. My GBs do nibble at their eggfood, but I wouldn't say they go crazy over it. So while I will stick with the twice weekly dose, I will make it a bit higher dose than I have been.
Hope your hen is doing OK now.
I didn't want to catch her and upset her. But shortly after she drank the water she did seem better, and it didn't happen again. My GBs do nibble at their eggfood, but I wouldn't say they go crazy over it. So while I will stick with the twice weekly dose, I will make it a bit higher dose than I have been.
Hope your hen is doing OK now.

Fran
-----------------------
1 cat (Lexy) and hopefully soon another pair of Gouldians
My Website: https://www.localcolourart.com/meet-the ... 6b2f58a839
-----------------------
1 cat (Lexy) and hopefully soon another pair of Gouldians
My Website: https://www.localcolourart.com/meet-the ... 6b2f58a839
- HoangQuan
- Amateur Architect
- Posts: 467
- Joined: Fri Mar 13, 2009 7:08 am
- Location: Hochiminh City, Vietnam
- Contact:
Franny, I dont have liquid calcium, I used to use calcium boost powder, but Im out of it and my order will arrive by 5th April(!). I think you were right, calcium is the main cause of this. I've just realized that, unlike the cock, the hen hasnt even touched the cuttle bone for months, so the calcium boost I provide in the water may enough for her to live, but now she's about to laid an egg and I guess she need more.
This morning she appeard to be better but still puffy and sleepy, I have no choice but putting in the aviary a cup of traditional "mineral mixture" for her to eat, thanks God she loved that and she ate a lot.
Hope she'll be fine tomorrow.
This morning she appeard to be better but still puffy and sleepy, I have no choice but putting in the aviary a cup of traditional "mineral mixture" for her to eat, thanks God she loved that and she ate a lot.
Hope she'll be fine tomorrow.
- L in Ontario
- Mod Emeritus
- Posts: 13365
- Joined: Sat Feb 11, 2006 10:29 am
- Location: Barrie, Ontario Canada
- Contact:
I agree with the others in that she's probably getting ready to lay an egg. I've had hens that get puffy in the evening and look better the next morning. If it goes on too long - I give them a drop of liquid calcium to their beak and add it to their water also (like Fran said).
Best wishes that she's okay until your supplies arrive.
Edit: If she's not touching the cuttlebone, you can scrape some of it on top of their seeds too.
Best wishes that she's okay until your supplies arrive.
Edit: If she's not touching the cuttlebone, you can scrape some of it on top of their seeds too.
Liz
-
- Molting
- Posts: 6421
- Joined: Mon Feb 23, 2009 9:39 pm
- Location: California, SF Bay Area
Since I have 2 female juveniles, I might run into this as well.
When are the F able to start laying/producing eggs?
They are in a community cage. I don't have my finches separated by sex.
I give them egg shells, since the F don't pick at the cuttlebone very often, and they do eat the egg shells.
When are the F able to start laying/producing eggs?
They are in a community cage. I don't have my finches separated by sex.
I give them egg shells, since the F don't pick at the cuttlebone very often, and they do eat the egg shells.
Gary
gouldians (GB,YB,BB), blackbelly firefinches (trying to breed), societies (foster parents).
red factor canary
gouldians (GB,YB,BB), blackbelly firefinches (trying to breed), societies (foster parents).
red factor canary
- Sally
- Mod Extraordinaire
- Posts: 17929
- Joined: Thu Mar 29, 2007 11:55 pm
- Location: DFW, Texas
Though we shouldn't let them breed at such an early age, Zebras can start as early as three months. I had juvenile Fire finch siblings that started breeding and laying eggs as soon as they had molted into their adult colors (of course, the eggs were tossed, and the brothers/sisters were separated after that!).
-
- Molting
- Posts: 6421
- Joined: Mon Feb 23, 2009 9:39 pm
- Location: California, SF Bay Area
- Littlemissfinch
- Flirty Bird
- Posts: 201
- Joined: Fri Jan 23, 2009 10:34 pm
- Location: Vancouver Washington
- HoangQuan
- Amateur Architect
- Posts: 467
- Joined: Fri Mar 13, 2009 7:08 am
- Location: Hochiminh City, Vietnam
- Contact: