Cairo's a red-sided, though he's likely a mix (likely Aru or Vos somewhere in his genealogy) since breeders don't keep subspecies straight very well here. His weight varies from 380-395g; local ekkies owners say this is normal (some say overweight) for red-sided ekkies since they're a smaller subspecies. I'm wondering if this weight is also because he's only 16 months old and has more room to grow. But I thought ekkies were supposed to be 440-600g, so I'm a bit concerned.
His toe-tapping has stopped since we started eliminating stuff. He's currently on broccoli, butternut squash, red bell peppers, snow peas, and brown/red rice. I hope to reintroduce more greens into his diet, but I'm hesitant to since the bok choy variants here aren't cleaned well before they reach the store (I've come across some with blue pellets on the inside). When he used to eat bok choy (xiao bai cai and shanghai greens), I would soak them in plain water for a while before rinsing and chopping; now, I'm thinking that I might need to find more strict measures on the cleanliness of his food (still researching on this part).
We're having an issue though where he is reluctant to eat his chop if I don't add rice in. And when I add rice in, he'll sometimes try to pick out only the rice, but other times, he'll just gobble the chop down with it. So I have to make his rice soggy enough to coat his veggies to encourage him to eat more.
That being said, I'm concerned about how much he eats. Per meal, I offer him about 3/4 cup (sorry, my measurements go back and forth between Imperial and Metric), but he normally only finishes 2/3 of it. Based on the images I've seen on this forum, I'm sure he should be eating more each meal, but he doesn't want more when I try to give him more.
It's been terribly confusing for me recently, especially with his yeast problem. His bubbly, yellow pee is gone; it had switched to mostly urine and feces with alternatively mixed or no visible urates. Now, it's going back and forth between looking normal/healthy again and just urine with dark feces. I'm scheduling an appointment this week for him since his meds are finishing up, but just seeing the inconsistency worries me a lot.
I don't know what I'm doing wrong. My next step is to find stainless steel bowls for him instead the plastic ones his previous family gave us. I'm scrubbing his floor grill and tray every day with vinegar and water. His whole cage gets scrubbed down with vinegar and water twice a week. I cook a new batch of rice every evening for dinner, then refrigerate and reboil in the morning for breakfast. He's occasionally offered treats (coconut, banana, etc) during the day, but it doesn't make a noticeable difference either way. I work full-time, so I can't give his probiotics the 2-hour gap between his meds and the probiotics (per vet's request) except if I come home early or on the weekends; I'm almost to the point of asking my partner to take time to feed Cairo a probiotic-coated snack during the day (he already goes the extra mile of watching and training Cairo during the day).
He's been napping a bit throughout the day, but I don't know if that's because he's not getting good sleep (he sleeps with his cage covered, but sometimes my partner has to do work late in the evenings so there's some noise). Or maybe it's because we're in the rainy season, so the lighting is dimmer and us humans nap more on the weekends when it's raining. Yet when we do flight training, he's so active and eager and overall animated, so maybe it's just normal for him now that he's relaxed with us.
But between the sword of Damocles (in the form of toe-tapping) and his digestive problem, I'm bewildered and lost on how to keep him healthy (I mean, that should be at least the bare minimum, right?). I'm so worried - going back to pellets is becoming more and more tempting if it'll just make him healthy, especially since the two vets here keep talking about pellets. Toe-tapping won't kill him immediately, but his digestive problems might.. I really don't know. I just want him to be happy and healthy. And within a month of him coming home to us, he's been struggling, so the clear variable is something that I'm doing wrong, not him.