Monday, May 23, 2011

Garden Time!

So...all of my perennials from last year survived!  They were pretty scrawny for a while...then NY weather brought in the rain, and everything leapt right up again!  The exception is my various artemesias...urgh.  I think I may need to fertilize them a bit.

Wildflowers carpet a good part of our wooded turnabout, which B is more than happy not to mow.  We both love the touch of wilderness that it lends the wooded side of our driveway! 

I've discovered that the yellow flowers that are everywhere are an invasive species from Europe called Chelidonium majus forma, Greater Celandine.  The sap is bright yellow and will stain your hands if you're not wearing gloves...It breaks so easily, but it pulls up with relative ease.


Dead Nettle is also everywhere, but it's so cute!  B and I thought it was some sort of mint, but it has no minty smell, though it IS in the mint family!

 
Our front steps are now adorned with beautiful tree stump-like pots, which I planted with Pansies, wild Violets, Lemon Verbena, and Creeping Jenny. 

I love the scent of Lemon Verbena...it smells like moist towelettes you use to wipe your fingers after eating BBQ or shellfish!

 B and I picked out two gorgeous hanging baskets this year for the beginning of our walkway from the south driveway.  Purple and pink Fuchsia and adorable Chenille Cattails are enchanting!  The cattails look and feel like caterpillars!!  They're so soft....There was a little boy at Grossman's who was staring at them forever.  I finally told him it was okay to pet them, and showed him that he could touch them if he liked.  He finally did and we giggled and pet the cattails for several minutes, then he trotted off bubbling joyously to his mother about how soft and fun they were to pet. 


As you can see, my Red Columbine and Dark Blue Tower Columbine are bursting with life!  Hopefully my Artemesia will catch up and spill over the rocks again like they did so splendidly last year.  I forget what the pink plant is mixed in with the Columbine... 

We've had random tulips pop up all over the place, thanks to the squirrels, no doubt.  We even had daffodils pop up in the wooded area compost pile!

 Both my species of Astilbe (above and below) are back and faring well!  I had to pull them up and relocate them so I could plant my herb garden this year, but they went easily without a fuss and settled right in again.


 All three of my Coppertina Ninebarks -- Thalia, Aglaia, and Euphosyne -- are doing great!  Their colours vary so drastically, I'm not sure why -- maybe it's the amount of sunlight they get?  I finally planted the one below beside Kenna (my Crimson Queene Japanese maple) beside front of the north-facing garage door.

 My Full Moon Japanese Maple, Sachi, is also back!!  I was so happy to see that she wasn't dead after I failed to put her into shade last year (and she burned), that I cried.  I watered her plentifully and moved her into a shady spot near the kitchen birdfeeder area and I'm going to plant her this week in front of the house!  Sachi is absolutely glorious....
 
 Guess what massive plant this is (above)!  If you guessed, "Catnip", you're right!!!  No, I kid you not, that's my Catnip!!  The leaves are 3-4 inches long, longer than my middle finger!  I've pinched the buds to help it bush out and expand this year so we'll have lots of happy cats.  It's really strong, too, all of the cats reared away from the buds as I crushed them and took off running with their lips peeled back from their teeth!  They came back to roll around eventually, then much mischief ensued!

My three little dwarf Golden Princess Spirea are doing great, too!  I was so happy to see that they were back after the winter!  I call them my Yoshi Bushes.  Yoshi, the green dinosaur from Mario, that is.  Mikari, my Magnolia tree, is doing fantastic, as well!  The blasted rain took out all my beautiful blossoms, but not before I was able to give Peaches one for her birthday in a bouquet I made for her!

My Peonies have yet to bloom, but they're almost there!

What I've designated as my Wildflower Zone is currently filled with Rocket, Dandelions, Johnny Jump Ups, wild Violets, and who knows what else!  This is going to be my work in progress...We were going to smash the barbeque up, but we kept it, because it's kind of like a throne on the other side...

We just got back from Grossman's today and brought home an entire trunkload of beautiful, wonderful plants!!  I had snuck off to Agway earlier this week and brought home my own carload of greenage, too...

 The coppery black Vertigo grass (above) is going to be gorgeous against the house by the birdfeeder!  Escargot Begonias (below) will be going into Gnome Woods.  The spiraling pattern of their leaves is absolutely enchanting!!

Blue and Black Salvia will look stunning.....uhm, where ever I wind up putting them...I have no idea where some of these plants will go, but I'll figure something out!  They may go into my Wildflower Zone!

Celosia was a pick for B, because he always remarks on how cute they look, so I finally caved in and brought a flat of mixed colours home with us.

Forget-Me-Nots!!!!  These are really cute, because occasionally, there are weird little lavender guys in with the blues!  These are definitely going into my Wildflower Zone!

The Magic Carpet Spirea is new to my garden from Agway, and it will likely be going into my Wildflower Zone, too!  I plan on planting it across from the Coppertina on the north-facing garage door side so it gets enough sun.

I laughed when I saw this marked as "Lil Kim Lilac" (above), then came home and looked it up, only to find it's called "MISS Kim Lilac".  Maybe I should call the nursery and let them know...The scent is incredible!!  It's a dwarf species, so it will only grow 4-6 feet tall.  I can also keep it trimmed shorter, if need be, I imagine.  Our lilac bushes around the property are blooming right now, also, and the scent is heavenly.

Miss Kim Lilac (background), Sand Cherry, and Magic Carpet Spirea awaiting planting!  The Sand Cherry is cool!  It'll grow to be 7-10 feet tall, so it's very manageable.  I plan on planting her opposite of Kenna beside the bay window.  Aside from having beautiful purple-red foliage, it will also produce black berries to feed the birds!

Shoshoni Doublefile Viburnum, who I've named Aiyana, is going to go just beneath the cover of the maple trees along the wooded area between our house and F & M's house.  It'll be covered in berries for the birds to eat after it's done flowering!  I can't wait to get it established, it'll be wonderful to have more foodsources for the birds!!

Spitfire Coleus is another incredible addition to my garden this year!  I'm not sure where I'll put it yet, but B thinks it looks like it's dead.... T_T  I'm starting to think I want a Fall Garden year round... B said he thinks we should have bright spring flowers for spring and summer, because everything will go red in fall.  Sigh.

Well, that's it for my garden until I hit up more garden shops -- and only after I get all of these guys planted!!  I'm pretty sure I'm gardening outside, because I'm trying to avoid cleaning the inside of my house.  Argh.... Alright, it's midnight, time for bed!

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Warm, soggy moment with Kai. (Bathtime)

I had an incredibly cute, warm, soggy (fuzzy) moment today in the shower with Kai today in the shower.  Some people may ask, "Why was Kai in the shower??"  Well, whenever I take showers, I take Kai with me so we can shower together.  He gets showers in the shower, but also over the kitchen sink while sitting on the faucet with the hand sprayer.  I give him a bath that soaks him completely three days a week, and he gets light spritzes in between.  It keeps him happy and softens up any pinfeathers that he may have so he can work them free easier, especially during his molt.

I was rinsing my face off with my back towards Kai, and I hear him try to fly from his perch onto my head.  My shoulders are too small, and he doesn't like to slap me in the face, because I squeaked the first time he tried.  He doesn't like to hurt me on accident.  Kai landed on the bottom of the tub, instead, and when I turned around to make sure he was okay, he waddled right over and perched on my toe, looking up at me.  Some of the water from the showerhead sprinkled down on him, and he spread his wings and tail out and started to bathe right there on my foot!  It was so adorable, I sang to him and he continued to bathe until he gave me his, "I'm done!" honk, then I picked him up and finished showering. 

It was a super adorable moment...Afterwards, we ate a bit of lunch together, and now he's here with me in the computer room.  I close both my doors up so it stays warmer and he can dry off faster.  Brrrrr......it's 43F here right now.  Go figure that NY still thinks it's winter well into spring....

Monday, May 16, 2011

My Bird Feeder List (2009-2011) -IN PROGRESS-

Please be patient while I go through 3 gigs of birding photographs to find all my resident and visiting birdies!

This will be our third summer living in our house, so I thought I would list all the birds that I've seen at our feeders!  I have  platform feeders for the "boisterous" birds, and hanging feeders for our "polite" birds, as well as suet baskets and peanutbutter+seeds smeared onto tree bark.  Notable birds include:
Skeeter, a disheveled looking mourning dove who will let you walk within two feet of him without becoming alarmed.
Soldat, a blue jay whom all other jays respect and let eat first, whom has a drooping wing due to an old healed injury.
 Baldy, a male cardinal whose head is completely bald.

Pair indicates there are clear mated pairs, single means I've seen them singly, or I can't tell if it's the same bird or a different one!

Boisterous birds:
Blue Jay pairs

Common Grackle pairs


Crow two pairs
Northern Flicker single

Pileated Woodpecker (new sighting for 2011 Holy pteradactyl, batman!!) single

Red Bellied Woodpecker pair
Red Headed Woodpecker pair

Red Wing Blackbird (new for 2011) one pair, three males

Ruby Throated Hummingbird (if you don't believe they're boisterous, you've never been dive bombed by a pissed off hummingbird before!) singles?
Yellow Bellied Sapsucker single

Polite birds:

 *Kissu!*
American Goldfinch three pairs

Black Capped Chickadee three pairs

Cardinal three pairs

Chipping Sparrow pairs

Common Redpoll pairs

Downy Woodpecker pairs
European House Sparrow pairs

House Finch pairs

Indigo Bunting (new for 2011) pair
Northern Mockingbird

Red Breasted Nuthatch pairs

Rose Breasted Grosbeak pair

Pine Siskin single (new for 2011)

Titmouse pairs
White Breasted Nuthatch pairs

Yellow Rumped Warbler (new for 2011) single

Yellow Warbler (new for 2011) pair

Ground birds:

American Robin dozen

Dark Eyed Junco (new for 2011) dozens!!

 
Fox Sparrow (new for 2011) single

Kildeer single

Mourning Dove expanding family, three pairs

White Crowned Sparrow pair

White Throated Sparrow pair

Unseen, but heard:
Eastern Screech Owl pair
Great Horned Owl

Resident Raptors:
Bald Eagle juvenile (spotted by Casey flying over our house!)

Sharp Shinned Hawk female

Red Tailed Hawk female
Turkey Vultures families

Fuzzies:
Chipmunk!
 Grey Squirrel family
Ground Hog pair
Rabbit family (absent 2011)
Red Fox (resident, across the street)

Red Squirrel pair, mommy is preggers!
Skunk family

White Tailed Deer family

Springtime with Kai

I've been away for a while due to being so busy, but I'm still here, if not as active!

We are now well into spring and I'm happy to report that Kai's aggression issues are very mild. He seems to be more clingy and needy than usual, because he is generally more aloof and content to be independent while doing his own thing. He hasn't begun to molt yet, but I expect he'll be more tetchy and mouthy when that time comes. The only thing that he's taken to doing, which isn't favourable, is emitting an ear piercing chirp if I stow him away in his house and he isn't pleased, or when we come home and don't go in to see him immediately. I haven't been reinforcing him and wait until he's quiet again for a few minutes to go in and see him. If we're separated and he's just making his normal, "Where are you?" call, I gladly respond back to him. It reminds me of how my mom, sister, and I call to each other in stores so we can find one another with soft clicks. I'm hoping that the ear piercing calls will expire with the passing of spring. He has been more vocal and grumbly in general.

Kai's aggression towards my husband has lessened. Despite it being mating season, he's been more tetchy and mouthy, but relatively mild (compared to other stories I've read!). At the beginning, he would lunge at my husband and try to take souveniers home, but his aggression towards him has dissolved. I think it may have to do with the fact that I now have my husband open his house when it's dinner time. If the stove is on, Kai is kept safely in his house, so he's only allowed to prep food (and sample bits of what's to come!) with me before I stow him away. When everything is done and we're ready to eat, I have my husband open his door and tell him, "Go perch, time to eat dindin!" So I'm happy to say that Kai no longer wants to torment my husband as much since I figured out this nice, new way to get them to interact positively and indirectly without physical contact.

Another odd thing I've noticed is that he now enjoys strawberries. He didn't like strawberries last year, but this year, he's decided that he likes them quite a bit! I wonder if he'll take to other red berries now? He generally doesn't like red things, unless it's bell peppers. This year, I'm growing many of his favourite things to eat, so we'll have lots of delicious, organic fruits and vegetables to feast upon over the summer and into fall. I'm anxious for the black raspberries and red raspberries to be ready to eat, they were so delicious last year!

His harness training has been progressing, but he still dislikes wearing it for the first couple minutes until he gets distracted by different surroundings. I only keep the harness on him for five to ten minutes at a time before removing it so he doesn't become too uncomfortable. I find that handling his wings during baths has helped him to become more accustomed to getting the harness on and off. He won't mouth or bite me if I handle him during baths, which has been very good! Eventually, I'll teach him that he can still fly with his harness in while indoors. I'm still leery of taking him out in a harness in stores, so he just rides around in his carrier if we go out. It would be all too tragic if he was startled by a dog, flew to the end of the leash, then got killed by the dog in pursuit. I have nightmares about that sort of thing! I would really love to take him with me to art shows, but one of our crafting friends has a phobia of birds, so I wouldn't want to subject her to terror like that.

I won't be taking Kai outside into the grass this year, because it looks like it's going to be a particularly bad year for ticks. I've already found one crawling on me after walking under a pine tree. *shudder*... The mites have been bad on raptors that we've banded this year, also. Last year, the chiggers were awful and I kept myself slathered with olive oil in an attempt to keep them at bay. I hope it's not as bad this year, I hate chiggers...! Other than that, I've been trying to teach Kai the names of various birds that come to our feeders. We've had a tizzy of newcomers, including Yellow Warblers, Yellow Rumped Warblers, and a enormous Fox Sparrow. Kai enjoys trying to talk to them through the window. He doesn't appear to like the Grackles, however, or the Crows, but that's understandable, they do look rather menacing. I plan on buying a bird song CD so we can both learn various bird calls.

In other news, during our stay in Britain, I'll be (dragging my husband along) going to Cornwall to visit the home of the World Parrot Trust, Paradise Park. Don't worry, I'll take tons of photographs!

More posting later, I need to get back outside and get my echinecea planted!

Monday, March 21, 2011

Spring Has Sprung!!

SPRING IS HERE!
I happened to be looking out the window as I prepared dinner last week and was greeted by a magnificent sight!!  A little Redwing Blackbird was sitting on my feeder!  I scared R, because I squealed so loud and went running for my camera.  When I got back, there were THREE!  And when I tiptoed up to see where all the doves had gone, I realized THERE WERE EVEN MORE ON THE GROUND!!
I couldn't get pictures of them, because I'm too short, but I didn't want to startle them off by getting onto a chair, either.  All the migratory birds are coming up again, so it's a sure sign that spring is finally here!!  The weather has been warming up really nicely -- then it plummets violently back down.  It might look crystal clear and fantastically sunny outside, then I step outside in a t-shirt, all excited about it being warm -- only to dart back inside again for a coat!  The sunshine is so deceptive!!  BRRRRR........

I'm so anxious to get my vegetable garden up and running again, but we're still not clear of cold snaps, and the garden stores are waiting for frost dangers to be over, also.  I didn't start my garden early this year, I figured that I would just buy the much bigger, sturdier plants from the garden stores instead.  The exception will be the snap peas, which I absolutely loved, and will replant this year.  They grew SO incredibly fast, I don't think I'll miss out on much if I start them from seed right into the soil.  I'll be picking the zucchini much sooner this year, too, rather than letting them grow into massive 4 lb monstrosities...They just turn so hard and gourd-like when they get big.  Bleahhh...
R and I also taped off the ocean room again (and ran out of tape partway through) and repainted it delphinium blue.  I'm going to be sponging the darker inlet blue over it to see if I can get the right effect that I'm looking for.  I've decided that I'm going to have it done by the summer so my little sister, mom and dad can have their own rooms when they come to visit in September.  I love the delphinium blue so much, I think I'd like to have it in the bedroom, too, instead of the darker blue I'd planned on.  I like the green in my craft room, but it just doesn't suit our bedroom.  I fished out the cool blue paper star that I bought from Pottery People two years ago and put it up.  It looks SO beautiful, and it's much brighter than the dark blue paper lantern the original owners had up.
I'm working on the house a little more each day when the pain and dizziness are bearable, but it's still slow going.  I hope to have the whole house cleaned up and looking nice before we go on our trip to Europe.  I'm still fretting over that, too, because I'm inevitably going to be worrying myself to death over our animals.  I got the okay to bring Kai's big house, so at least he won't be stuck in his little travel house, which is great, but he won't get nearly as much time to come out of his house to play at the shop.  What if he hates me when I come back?  What if he thinks I don't love him anymore?  T_T  
The same thing goes for Sacha...he was abandoned at the shelter and he's terrified of being abandoned, which he exhibits whenever we go to the vet's and he gets put into an exam room.  I'm worried that he's going to eat his tail off out of stress and worry...I'm hoping that he'll just play all day with the other dogs until he's too exhausted to even think about chewing out of nervousness, though.  Twitch and Ash are going to be watching the kitties, since keeping them at the kitty kennel last time cost over $500 for ONE WEEK...Yeah, we can't aford a whole month like that.  I'm already cringing to think of what Sacha's boarding will be like. 
R told me a cute story about Mia from last night when Twitch came over!  I had gone to bed a little early, cuz I get really tired early this time of the month.  For some reason or another, Mia and Murdock are terrified of new people.  Mia will actually hear the doorbell and make a mad dash for the laundry room, where she'll scramble over the shelving and voluntarily wedge herself behind the washer.  Getting her out requires a lot of smashing one's face against the wall while trying to reach her with an outstretched arms and very strong fingers. 

Well, since Twitch has been coming around more often, I think they're getting more used to him!  Murdock no longer runs in terror if we're standing in the kitchen talking :)  So yeah, the cute story!!  (Sorry, it's late and my brain is sleepy and rambly...) Twitch was sitting in my spot on the couch and Mia hopped right up, walked all over him, and even lay down on him for pettings!  Only, the second he spoke, she'd be making a mad dash for cover again!!  So as long as he didn't talk, she was perfectly happy to sit with him...  Kitties are so weird...!!  It also made for a very silent night, since Twitch really loves our kitties.  It gives me a lot of hope that they'll be just fine when they come over to care for them during the summer.
March kicked off the official Hawk Watch season, though I haven't gotten out to Braddock Bay yet.  It's just way too cold for me, still.  Once it starts warming up and my arthritis/fibro isn't killing me, I should be good to start visiting again.  I really want to get out to Owl Woods to see if I can photograph some owlies!!  I went to the volunteer meeting with Peaches last week (or was it the week before?) when she gave a presentation on owlies.  She did such an awesome job, and she and Daena both taught the class so much about owls!  I'm dead set on putting up my owl box and my other bird boxes this year.  We just have to borrow the 20 foot ladder back from M & B's house now that they're done with it for the winter.
I'm working with Kai on wearing his flight harness, also.  I finally put it over his head today after gradually introducing him to it.  Well, understandably, he didn't like that.  I got beaked quite a bit, and he did bite me once hard enough to draw blood as I took it off of him.  On a good note, he's gotten so good about letting me flip him over onto his back, though!  He'll let me play with his wings and feet, too.  When I kiss his head, I always keep my finger on his beak, just to know where it is in case he makes to bite me, which I know some birds can and will do during this hormonal/mating season.  Thankfully, he's not humping on anything, either... *knocks on wood!*
I thought I'd show a few pictures of how I made his house up this week :)  Every Sunday, I change his house around after I wash everything (house, perches, toys, bowls/dishes, etc), to make it different and exciting.  This week, it's Boing Week!  Boings are ropes with a metal coil inside to make them springy and somewhat rigid.  Birds generally absolutely love Boings.  Kai adores his boings and loves to swing from them upside down and play on them.  I add a lot of stuff for him to pick through and fling out of bowls, too, like popsicle sticks, jingle balls, toys, wooden beads, discs, etc.
I also ordered something special from The Parrot Lady!  It's called a Parrot Pocket (http://www.parrotpockets.com/), and it's made of untreated leather, so it's very resilient.  Kai didn't quite know what to make of it, but I stuffed it full of food and he's been figuring out how to properly use it.  It's a little tight and hard to get things into, but I imagine it'll loosen up over time.  You'll notice that I like to tie toys to his house...Kai also LOVES to play with things that swing, but it's also to keep him from flinging everything in the world off his house.  He likes picking them up again once he's swung them, too!
I also bought some colorful luffas for Kai to chew on!  I stuffed them with tasty treats to provide forage-ability, too!
Another super wonderful, cheap ($8 at Country Max) foraging toy is a woodpecker feeder!  It has four holes to insert the cylindrical woodpecker suet/seed bullets into, but I just put treats and food or popsicle sticks into the holes.  I wouldn't recommend it for birds whose heads are small enough where they might get stuck in the holes, though!!
I always hide treats in his toys, especially old toys that he might have beaten up a lot from the past.  I rotate his toys every week, also, so he never gets bored with them.
Okay, well it's definitely bedtime now.  Kai is whining at me to put him nighnight.... Good night, Moon!!
Naughty Kai is trying to get onto my desk to attack my mouse and keyboard, hee...

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Kai likes to share.

Birds are social animals.  They do everything together, and absolutely hate to be separated from the flock. This means they also eat together, which is why Kai always eats with us at dinner time, and also why he eats when I do if we're in my craft room together.  Earlier, I was eating fish sticks, and since I was starving, I ate them well before Kai was done eating....The following is a transcript of what happened...!

Kai: *Eating a walnut out of the shell, stops to look at M.*
Me: You can keep eating, Kai, I'm full.
Kai: *questioning chirp, followed by...* Want seed? Good seed?
Me: No, that's okay, thank you!
Kai: Want seed. Good boy. *flings the walnut at M.* That's good seed!
Me: *Cracks up, picks the walnut up and pretends to eat it.* Thank you, you're such a good boy!
Kai: Good boy, such a good boy. That's good.


It was so endearing that he felt I should be eating more, and especially that he wanted to share with me.  He often asks me, "That's good?" if I'm eating something he's never seen before, too.  Oddly, he doesn't seem to care for sunflower seeds anymore.  I wonder if it's because he just likes other "good seed"s better.

Kai: Seed?
Me: Okay, Kai, you want seed?
Kai: Seed?
Me: What seed?  Flower (sunflower)? White (pumpkin)? Peanut?
Kai: SEED. (give me a seed, woman!)
Me: Okay, how about Flower seed? *offers.*
Kai: *picks it up and drops it.* Seed?
Me: What about White seed? *offers.*
Kai: *flings that, too.* Want GOOD seed.
Me: What is good seed?? *holds out an assortment.*
Kai: Mmmm!  Good seed.  *selects peanut halve.*  That's good seed.
Me: Hnnnnnnn.....okay, then.  You're such a little diva!
Kai: Kai's a good boy.
Me: Yes, Kai's a good boy.


Good seed also seems to indicate pistachio, pecan, and walnut....

Thursday, February 17, 2011

You're So Cute! (and moderately hormonal....)

The weird, warm/sunny winter weather here in Upstate NY is causing Kai's spring hormones to come early.  I worry about birds down south taking the warmer weather as a cue to begin migrating back up to Canada prematurely, then having a sudden cold snap come through to wipe them out.  It would be horrible...!

Kai has been very talkative lately and still enjoys singing along to metal music the best!  I was stretching the other day, and he told me, "You're so cute!"  Last month, he told me, "(I) love you," also.  I hope he never stops learning words, he's such a smart little guy!  Who knows how long he was practicing before he found the courage to speak above his little Pionus mumble?
(Kai's Pionus mumblings below!)

Kai turned one this past summer, but it would appear that he's growing up and becoming an adult, which makes me a little teary-eyed.  It's not that he's changed all that much, but there have been slight differences in his behavior.  Even if he stopped wanting to be with me and decided to pick R, instead, I would still love him!  His hormones don't appear to be that dramatic, not like some of the nightmarish attack birds that some people report, at least.  He's just been mouthier, enjoys biting his shreddables more, and attacks his perches more aggressively during play.  Since he's been able to fly, he's been much more confident and happy!  There's still minor, occasional territorial aggression when it comes to his house in my craft room if R comes near, but half the time, he's content to sit still and not clamber to his drawbridge to appear all 230 grams of menacing, threatening, blue-and-green fluff.  I had been worried that since he can fly, he would be flying around assaulting everyone in sight, but that hasn't been the case, thankfully.
I've been giving him lots of foraging containers and materials to look through to keep him busy.  The only receptacle that I leave in his cage in the same place every day is his water bowl, which I've been having to clean more like three times a day.  He seems to like soaking food more this month!

Kai really enjoys the mixed nuts that I give him, too.  Almonds have fallen out of favor since I introduced him to pecans and walnuts!  I partially crack the shells for him, since Pionus beaks aren't as strong as other parrots' beaks.  He still loves "chio" (pistachio), though.  I feel it's important to give one's parrot a couple nuts each day, as the oils and fat in them are probably needed.  Kai is also going through a minor molt right now, so I have given him a bit more protein to help him through.  I seriously worried that he was going bald at one point, because a pinky-finger-tip sized bald spot turned up right above his cere!  I watched to see if his skin was irritated, and in a couple days, teeny little pinfeathers started poking through.  I felt so bad for him, he was absolutely miserable for a week while they grew in.  I just kept soaking him to soften up those itchy bits and to give him some relief.  When he's molting like this, I bathe him ever other day, at least. 
I'm not sure if it's just that he's in much better health since I've switched him mostly off of artificially colored, sugar-filled pellets and onto 20% TOP pellets, 10% Lafaeber's, and 65% veggies/fruits, and 5% nuts/other (including a scrape of coconut oil and red palm oil), but his feathers look much better!  He's also much more active and healthy since he's been able to fly around to get exercise, also.  When he was younger, he tended to just hang out in one spot, but now he climbs around much more and enjoys being able to fly from room to room following me.  I'll tell him, "I'm going kitchen," and he'll know to fly to me in the kitchen after I've gotten a head start.  He also knows, "Let's go house!" as meaning we should go to my craft room where his house is.  "Let's go perch and eat dindin," well, he knows that one really well, too!  The only thing is, since I'm so small, my shoulder makes a horrid landing pad.  Kai really really dislikes hitting me in the face, I think because I made a sound when he accidentally slapped me, so he's taken to landing on my head instead.  He's very considerate like that.
I don't really mind if he lands on my head, because he steps down onto either my hand or another spot, like the counter or the faucet, if I ask him to.  R gets annoyed if Kai lands on his hoodie, mostly because he doesn't want to get pooped on or bitten.  (Poop from any species is a huge deal to R for some reason, I forget that he didn't grow up with a lot of animals like I did much of the time.)  Since Kai has been able to fly, though, every time that he's landed on R, there has been absolutely no aggression whatsoever.  In the past, he liked to try to give R nips, and R REALLY wasn't helping as he'd do all kinds of "fun" things to encourage that behaviour in Kai.  (You bet I scolded R for it...though I'd do it where Kai couldn't see me.)  If we hear Kai flying into the kitchen, R knows to duck, because chances are, he's wanting to land on the sink faucet, which is his favourite place to hang out so he can "help" me prep to cook dinner. 
We had a "visitor" in early February, also!  My friend's daughter, Cailey, had an (awesome!!) school project where they mailed the "flat" versions of themselves to family/friends!  It's based on a book called Flat Stanley, where a little boy is flattened and is able to go on adventures, because he can slip under doors or be mailed in envelopes.  I took Flat Cailey all over the city one weekend.  We visited the adoption clinic at PetsMart, had lunch at our favorite Korean BBQ restaurant, went to a bunch of other shops, had dinner at our favourite Thai restaurant, and she got to meet all our animals.  The next day, we took her to Lollypop Farm, and she got to meet a MASSIVE 180 lb Great Pyrenees dog!  I had never seen one before in real life, and flashbacks of Mr. Tadakichi (of Azumanga Daioh fame) instantly sprung to mind!  I was also fortunate enough to get Cailey in time for one of the few winter craft shows going on.  We got to see Kira, Casey and Amanda, as well as Robert at the show, so we got pictures with them, and I was able to give Cailey samples of their crafts!



R was a bit exasperated with me by the time I finally sent Flat Cailey back home, but I told him that if we ever had kids, he would understand.  I printed out about seventy-five photographs and wrote descriptions for Cailey's mom to read to her on the back.  My hand was just about dead by the time I packed her away into a box with goodies in it.  I also packed some cute paintable ceramic stuff in for Cailey and her brother to play with.  It's really cute, because apparently I "already live at Cailey's house", and Cailey "has me over to play in her room" often.  Does this make me an imaginary friend?  I wonder what Cailey imagines me as being?  (I'm kind of scared to ask!)  Either way, it's sheer adorableness.  I wish kids didn't grow out of stuff like that so fast...
I'm starting to do things early so I'll have stuff to sell at this year's Mayday Underground, also.  More samples of what I'm making will come later.  Nanaa's begun planning to make things for our shop, too, so I'm excited to see what she comes up with.  I'm a little worried that my portion of stuff will have mostly to do with birds and not kitties at all, but they're just so much fun to draw cutely.  I really need to remember to have my banner printed out, too, urghh...

Well, I should get back to the drawing board now.  I'm also due to go to my doctor's appointment in two and a half hours - joy of joys.  I guess I figured out (half a year ago!) that I would still be awake at 8am.  At least I'll be avoiding traffic, too, because the city traffic trying to get home is insane and I can never get back home, because I'm (terrified!!) not an aggressive driver at all.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Coming in for a Landing! One Week of Flying with Kai and Lots of Poop.

Kai is progressing very nicely on learning to fly!  He's become more confident, but he's also become a little more territorial where his cage is concerned.  It troubles me a little that people say that you should clip their wings so "they have to depend on you".  They already depend on you for food, water, and companionship, that shouldn't necessitate mutillating their wings.

I had listened in on a presentation that a man was giving when he spoke of his raptor.  He mentioned that if he could never show fear, anger, or upset, or his raptor might lose confidence in him and possibly hurt him very badly.  He said that he would have to starve his raptor for a few days, because he was the one who controlled the food source, and then work on building his raptor's trust all over again.

That does make sense to me, in a way, though it isn't very kind.  Before anyone becomes upset at such treatment, I can't recall how many times I've heard of children being sent to bed without supper as a manner of discipline.  It's basically the same concept.  No one is going to die from not eating for a 12 hour period.  I don't recall being sent to bed hungry, though there were plenty of other times that I was starving, but had no access to food.  (Besides, if the kids are smart, they'll already have foxholed caches of food in their rooms, anyway, like I usually did!)

I would prefer to reward good behaviour rather than resort to punishment.  That being said, there is also a big difference between parrots and raptors.  Raptors are not affectionate; they learn that life with their master is a sure way to survive and depend upon them for food, shelter, and care.  In return, the falconer must trust that their raptor will return to them.  Parrots, on the other hand, are social birds, who are affectionate, and form strong bonds with their families. 

Would someone ever clip a raptor's wings?  No, of course not.  Raptors need to be able to fly to be physically and mentally healthy, and also to hunt.  Flying is what makes a bird so special and set apart from other species - there is no other animal (with feathers) which is capable of flight.  There is nothing as beautiful as a bird in flight, a butterfly fluttering from one flower to another, or a horse galloping across an open stretch of field (even if it's gleefully bucking and farting, ahem).  Flying promotes the best health they can be in by providing exercise as nature intended.  So why should anyone clip a parrot's wings and rob them of their flight?

I also feel strongly about other similar, related controversial issues, such as genital mutilation (circumcision), declawing, debarking, pinfiring, racing horses without closed knees,  ear and tail cropping, etcetera.  Why, for the love of children, would you do something like that to your helpless, vulnerable baby?  Why risk the slip of a scalpel, which accidentally severs the nerves which will later bring them pleasure and condemn them to a sexual life lacking sensitivity.  Why risk the doctor royally screwing up and severing the glans off completely?  Or how about a botched job and infection causing your son's penis to become necrotic and fall off, completely?   (It's happened....and it has been estimated that as many as 209 babies die every year from circumcision and related complications.)  I don't think I need to bring up MRSA.  Why risk mutilating and deforming a limb of his body, which will affect a large portion of his adult life later on?  I've seen some tragic examples due to botched jobs.  It isn't just their love life that's affected, it's their self-confidence, self-worth, and self-esteem.

Why would anyone surgically remove the claw at the distal phalanx and cause them a remaining lifetime of insecurity, biting due to fear aggression and the inability to fight back, trauma, and chronic pain?  For those who don't believe declawed animals suffer, they have but to ask someone with an amputated limb if they can still feel it, or if they still feel pain, because of it.  The answer is yes, and much of the time, it's chronic and lasts for the rest of their lives.  With debarking, people remove their dog's natural ability to communicate, causing a wellspring of behavioural issues and detriment to the dog's well-being.  Why don't more people notice their animals are suffering?  They have higher pain thresholds than people, though their trauma generally manifests in unfavourable behaviour, such as bite aggression, marking, excessive licking/plucking, and other self-mutilating examples.

That being said, it stands to reason that a parrot is also affected on many levels, not just physically, but also mentally. 

I found a site that has good information on it.  Also:

http://www.parrotchronicles.com/features/freeflight/freeflight.htm

http://www.flyingparrotsinside.com

I absolutely love and stand by the article written by Pamela Clark.

On a rather unsavory note, husband made the comment that, because Kai was flying from room to room, he thought it was time to clip him again.  I reasoned, "Well, then, we should cut off your cat's legs.  He doesn't need to play, tear around the house, or exercise, either..."  He said that his cat doesn't fly around the house like Kai does, and I said, "Have you never seen the cats running around the house before...?"

I have a long list of things that the cats have eaten, spilled, broken, damaged, or otherwise ruined in our house and past living spaces.  We buy furniture with the knowledge that it will become defaced by claws, covered in a veneer of shed fur every fall and spring, shredded, possibly peed and or pooped on/in, and otherwise made holey.  His cat not only mauls the couch corners to ribbons, but he also chews and eats the foam that comes out of it.  My cats poop in the bathtub, or on the kitty bathroom floor.  The bed has been christened numerous times when Ollie experienced blockage due to his bladder crystals, and twice when B's cat peed on it for no real reason at all.

My dog's stomach is extremely sensitive to treats and weather changes.  Quite often, if I'm not around, am sleeping, or if B ignores his pleas to go outside, my dog will go as far away as he can from either of us and do his business.  Then he'll run and hide... I've never so much as raised my voice at him for doing so, but he's always so ashamed and embarrassed that he did what he did where he did.  And my husband is worried about Kai flying around the house a little, occasionally pooping on stuff?  Let's compare poop size, shall we...?  This dog's head is also so insanely hard, once, he was doing his Husky 500, took the corner too fast, and ran straight into the steel wall corner reinforcement.  He was fine, but he BUCKLED the corner, broke through the drywall, and made a dent that was over an inch thick.  Boy did I spend a lot of time trying to disguise that one with tablespoons of spackle, my airbrush, and acrylic paint diluted with rubbing alcohol.  I also had to hammer the buckled part flat again on the other side.

My life revolves around cleaning up sh*t, literally and figuratively.  I've done it for years - since I was 4 or 5, at least, and we got our first cat.  It doesn't bother me, seriously.  Some day, if I have a baby, I'll be cleaning up its poop, too.  Hell, I'll make my husband do it!  It'll be a nice dose of reality and an actualization of responsibility for him.  Maybe it will make him more sympathetic to what I deal with on a day to day basis.  Dog poops on the carpet?  I just sigh and make for the paper towels and the green machine.  Every morning, I change Kai's papers.  Every couple of hours, I scoop the litterbox and flush the kitty poop.  Every day, I clean some part of the house.  It's routine, I'm used to it, it doesn't bother me - and B comes home, none the wiser to what I've done.  He just knows that dinner is almost ready, that he can change out of his work clothes and into his freshly laundered comfy pants, and that he should feed everyone just before we eat.  And yet, when Kai poops on the floor, he freaks out a little?

Pshhh.  I told him it was training for all the poop that'd come with a child.  He said kids wore diapers and eventually potty trained.  I just gave him a look.  I told him about my friend's daughter, who has taken to removing her diaper, scooping her feces, and flinging it downstairs at her mother, followed by her poop-filled diaper.  If he thinks kids won't potty in bizarre places (like outside in the yard, like the dog, in planters, on doormats, in litterboxes like the cats, etc), he's sadly mistaken.

Where damage is concerned, I also don't think my husband realizes that Kai seldom chews.  Compared to other species, it doesn't appear that Pionus really chew much at all.  He'll snap wooden disks and take apart vine balls, maybe chew his hanging wooden feeder box, but he's never really chewed aside from that.  I've been trying to teach him to forage through cardboard, but that's not going very well.  Besides, I don't think Kai could ever cause nearly as much damage as the cats. 

SO.  I'm really not worried about Kai being flighted.  I'm working on recalling him, but so far, he's only really mastered flying from my hand to his house, his perch, or to the faucet.  He knows the difference between stepping up for me to go somewhere, and stepping up for me to practice flying.

Me: Kai, let's go!
Kai: *looks at finger.* (Na, thanks.)
Me: Come on, Kai, let's go!  Do you want to go kitchen and help make dindin?
Kai: *disinterested stare* (Ehhhhhh....)
Me:  Hnn.  Well, Kai, let's go whee!  Do you want to go whee?
Kai: *eyes sparkling* (We're going to fly?)
Me: Come on, Kai, let's go whee to perch, okay?
Kai: *steps up immediately!!* (Okay!!!)

He has found the confidence to fly from my room into the kitchen, usually up onto the top of the fridge, but he has yet to figure out how to fly to me.  I can tippie-toe to get him off of high places, but I don't know what I'd do if he got up onto something higher than I could reach.  I don't shoulder him at all, because I like my face, ears, and earrings.  I hold my arm out at a right angle to my body with my finger pointed as he flies towards me, but he winds up flying right over me.  I guess it'll just take practice!  I'm still optimistic.

Please note that if I'm cooking with the stove on, Kai is NOT in the kitchen with me and all the kitchen doors are closed.  Kai gets to eat bits of fruit and veggies on the faucet as I'm doing the prepwork, but as soon as it's time to turn the burners on, Kai has to go to his livingroom perch.  I'm not going to risk burning my bird.  It helped that my mother would totally flip out if my sister or I ever stepped within two feet of the stove or oven while it was on.  Why was she so paranoid?  Well, when I was a toddler, apparently she had the oven open and I fell against the door and burned my arm.  Lesson learned!  Years later, I still maintain that lesson with all of my animals (and my husband.).  My kids, human or furry/feathered, will always be kept safe from hot things...I'm very cautious, considerate of my animals' needs, and am a responsible individual, who has an understanding of each of their distinct personalities and temperaments.

One thing that I have been having him practice is flying from his playstand to his house.  That's been going swimmingly!  A couple times, he's flown in circles around the room, which I found delightful, only to land on something awkward for him to stand on.  Tonight, he landed on a framed picture that I have leaning against the wall waiting to be hung.  He was nearly face-flat against the wall as he clung to the frame.  I resisted the urge to go get him, because I want him to learn that mommy isn't always going to rescue him.  I told him, "Kai, if you don't like it, you should go house.  Come on, you can do it!"  After a couple minutes of looking at me pathetically, he sucked it up and managed to turn himself a little, then launched and flew right to his house!  I cheered and praised him as he crowed about what a good boy he was, then I gave him his beloved sunflower seeds and aya (papaya).  He's always so pleased with himself when he flies and lands right.

So far, so good - he hasn't tried to dive-bomb my husband yet.  We'll see how he does during mating season.  I'm going to take pains to try to keep his hormones at low levels by limiting his light exposure (our house is dark, anyway!), not feeding him large amounts of meat protein/eggs, and by not encouraging mating habits.

While on the subject of behaviours, I tried something new with his territorial cage aggression.   He struts around on his house, all puffed up like a macho bird if B walks by, or if I'm changing his papers and cleaning his tray out.  The strutting while cleaning his tray out is a new behaviour I haven't seen until recently.  T.T  My little baby is growing up... So, anyway...I don't want to encourage him to be territorial and show signs of aggression like that.  Well, while eyeballing my little puffball, I open up his treat bin and pull out a handful of pumpkin seeds and exclaim, "Seed!!"

Kai went from aggressive to perky bird in half a second flat.  I was mightily pleased and dumped the pumpkin seeds into his dish so he could eat them while I finished cleaning his tray out.  It only seems like he has aggression if he's out on top of his cage, but not if he's inside.  If I close his drawbridge up and change his tray, he shows absolutely no signs of aggression.

On another note, I also might get a little flight suit for Kai so I can take him to other people's houses or to the store, but we'll see how that goes...if I have any skin left on my fingers after trying to get it on!  Okay, I should really sleep now, it's 9:12 am as I finish this up...I need to sleep sometime today!

What Parrots See!

Parrots must have an amazing world to look at, since they can see in the ultraviolet spectrum of light!

These bananas, for instance, are not just green and yellow, but the ripe ones show as a vibrant blue!  This helps them to figure out which bananas are ripe enough to eat. 

This is what parakeets look like to eachother!  It's incredible!


From Wiki: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bird_vision

"Ultraviolet
The Common Kestrel can detect the ultraviolet trail of its vole prey.

Birds can perceive ultraviolet light, which is involved in courtship. Many birds show plumage patterns in ultraviolet that are invisible to the human eye; some birds whose sexes appear similar to the naked eye are distinguished by the presence of ultraviolet reflective patches on their feathers. Male Blue Tits have an ultraviolet reflective crown patch which is displayed in courtship by posturing and raising of their nape feathers.[25] Male Blue Grosbeaks with the most, brightest and most UV-shifted blue in their plumage are larger, hold the most extensive territories with abundant prey, and feed their offspring more frequently than other males do.[17]

The bill’s appearance is important in the interactions of the Blackbird. Although the UV component seems unimportant in interactions between territory-holding male, where the degree of orange is the main factor, the female responds more strongly to males with bills with good UV-reflectiveness.[26]

A UV receptor may give an animal an advantage in foraging for food. The waxy surfaces of many fruits and berries reflect UV light that might advertise their presence.[17] Common Kestrels are able to locate the trails of voles visually. These small rodents lay scent trails of urine and faeces that reflect UV light, making them visible to the kestrels, particularly in the spring before the scent marks are covered by vegetation.[27] "

Peaches has also pointed out that Saw-Whet Owls also have bright pink underfeathers on their wings!  She wrote:

"hehe, there are porphyrins in their feathers that react to the UV light.  for a while, there was a theory that you could tell the age of the bird by the checking the brightness of the underwing, but we lit most of the owls 2 years ago, and there's no appreciable difference that we could see.  its been pretty much abandoned as an aging  tool, because when they molt, the new feathers are brighter anyway...  all right, enough rambling about owls for now :)"