It's unreal how they came to us in such a short span of time. This has never happened before!
I literally paid the deposit on my first non-rescue baby Ekkie bird and found Ruby the very next week.
Three weeks after he came home and we now have FOUR Ekkies.
I've had 6-7 birds at a time in the past but a majority were fosters who came to us with months in between, many staying from 4-6 mos. and longer.
We went from adopting out Paco, getting Molly as our "last and final" Foster (yeah, RIGHT!) to having FOUR Ekkies in under four months. This is just nuts. Change doesn't overwhelm me but this is honestly almost overwhelming.
I can't turn away a plucker. I just can't. We have a large house I can't even enjoy due to my health and we had the spare cages and plenty of frozen mash to go around. We have room to quarantine and endless amounts of love to give.
At first I was only allowing myself to email a few questions to find out the situation. When we discovered Wrangler was the flock mate for Ruby, we all decided it was the right thing to do by Ruby. But then, I didn't want to risk Pinto going to a home of an impulse buyer who doesn't understand the demanding needs of a parrot, let alone Eclectus with their dietary requirements. So the decision was made.
Right now I'm feeling kind of numb, in a WTH was I thinking, way. But I know if he hadn't found a home in two months for these guys, there's a good chance he would adopt them to the next person to come along regardless of experience. He wasn't a parrot guy and worked very long hours. When his significant other moved out, he didn't want to take them with him and just left them there. That's a huge responsibility and I hate when animals pay the price for humans life choices.
I digress. Wrangler has already said Hello in Ruby's voice and is making the very same honking noises. My heart melted immediately. Pinto has made some noises. They both have ear-piercing calls that rival every screamer I've ever met. Luckily it's just a call and not a scream.
One concern: pinto is missing feathers in front of his eyes. I'm testing for disease as usual, but what's the treatment for hormonal imbalance?