Wishing Well - August 2009

4 Aug 2009, 1:34 pm - Posted by Jane Email - 5403 views - Categories: Home, Special Needs

In a facility as large as the World Parrot Refuge there will always be residents who need medical help. Once the diagnoses have been made, Wendy can continue with the daily medical attention and care. When there were only 400 or so birds it was not too difficult to absorb the costs. Even though Wendy works at least 13 hours every day and does not take a penny in compensation, the medical bills are piling up. The biggest worry is that we need to take more birds to see our already over-generous Doctor Anne MacDonald at Night Owl Bird Hospital.

Poppy in His Tree

Poppy, a Moluccan cockatoo who has lived with us for 8 years, started to sleep more than normal. When we examined him closely we could see that he was anaemic. Poppy is now in the hospital. His blood tests confirm anaemia. Now we have to find the cause. This includes many different tests including x-rays and an endoscope of the kidneys. He is currently receiving intensive care including antibiotics. The blood tests, x-rays and endoscopy are very necessary and the costs are high.

If you would like to help Poppy, please make a donation in his name. Every dollar makes a difference. Poppy does not yet have a sponsor for his daily care either.

Peaches is an Umbrella Cockatoo who has has been here for just about 1 year now. This little girl was rescued from a dreadful situation by one of our members. Starving and dehydrated, she was less than half her expected weight and unable to stand up. Her feet are totally deformed. We were told that her toes had been deliberately broken. She is now at full weight and has most of her feathers back. She can walk and loves to be cuddled, however, she has to wear a plastic collar to prevent her from chewing her legs. Now that she is physically able to take anaesthetic, we would like the veterinarian to see if her feet can have corrective surgery. We believe that it may be pain from her toes that causes her to try and chew her legs off. It has taken a lot of care to get her to this point. Now we would love to give her the chance to have a normal life – she deserves it.

If you would like to help Peaches with her surgery, please make a donation in her name. We will give her all the after-care, if you can help a little with her surgical needs.

Sweet Valentine

Valentine, the Moluccan Cockatoo, is a wonderful member of our sanctuary who has diligently fought bone cancer. He lost one wing to this dreadful disease, but has soldiered on regardless for years now. He has been a happy little guy without further problems for a long time. Suddenly a lump started to grow on his leg. He needs to have tests done, of course. Can you help? Valentine will allow the work to be done without a complaint. We will take care of him after Dr MacDonald has performed her miracle. We just need money to cover his medical bills. He has a wonderful sponsor for his everyday needs.

If you would like to help Valentine, please make a donation in his name. A small donation from many people will make the world of difference for him.

No feedback yet

Leave a comment


Your email address will not be revealed on this site.

Your URL will be displayed.
(Line breaks become <br />)
(Name, email & website)
(Allow users to contact you through a message form (your email will not be revealed.)

Judy Langille Avian Wellness Centre

9 Aug 2006, 11:15 pm - Posted by Jane Email - 1605 views - Categories: Special Needs

Judy Langille is a wonderful benefactor who made a huge contribution that enabled us to set up the special needs unit. The Judy Langille Wellness Centre is the heart of the refuge and provides us with a place to give individual attention to an ever-growing number of our psittacine family.

Special Needs Unit Patients

Many newcomers arrive at the Refuge in poor physical condition. The special needs unit is home to parrots with a multitude of medical and physical problems that make it impossible to them to join the free flight flock facility. None of the birds in the wellness center are sick with contagious diseases. Some are crippled, often as a result of neglect, abuse, or injuries sustained when being trapped in the wild. Others are self mutilators, and compulsively pluck out their feathers, which is a common response amongst parrots when dealing with the stresses of captivity. Many others have cancer. More often than not, their illnesses can be associated with years of malnutrition, lack of sunshine, physical confinement and emotional deprivation.

Their stay in this section may be for just a few weeks for short-term medical intervention but in most cases, it is home. Most of the birds here are not caged and are able to wander around at their leisure. Some are justifiably cautious and others are gregarious as they meet and greet visitors, demanding lots of love and attention as they share their lifetime of experience.

Currently the unit houses 53 parrots, ranging from a Green-winged macaw to a budgie. The variety of reasons for being in the unit is just as diverse. Several of the Moluccan cockatoos have cancer. One of the Amazon parrots has epilepsy and has been on medication for 25 years. Some of the macaws and Umbrella cockatoos have extreme physical disabilities that were caused when they were caught in snare traps in the wild.

We have emotionally abused cockatoos who cannot forget the horrible words that were used as weapons against them when they pulled out their feathers, while locked in cages in lonely rooms known as "the bird room".

We have physically abused birds who were so badly beaten that their wings still hang down or they yell "Damn Bird! Damn Bird!". We have an Eclectus, who was kept in a 20" square cage on the floor of a garage in an area prone to melting summer heat and long freezing winters, and now suffers from arthritis so badly that his grip is as soft as a touch. He now loves his huge run-around area with his chosen friend, another Eclectus, who was traded to a body shop for work on a car, and who is also now enjoying love, a great diet and fresh air. She actually lived in the body shop where all those chemicals were used.

Sadly many of the birds have become extreme self mutilators. We give them the medical care needed to prevent infection in their wounds. Soon they improve with the continuous loving care and more appropriate diet we provide and they are able to go back to their own flock in the refuge.

Some of the Moluccan cockatoos here have cancer, but with modern medicine, love and dedication their lives continue in a controlled manner. Elvis a Moluccan Cockatoo is very old (possibly over 60) and is blind from macular degeneration, which is the same aging problem that affects humans. With proper care and love he will live out the rest of his life in comfort within the world parrot refuge.

There are so many reasons why these birds are in the unit. The financial cost to the refuge is enormous as, for many of the birds, it is intensive care. Your help is desperately needed. If you feel you can donate any money, please click on the following "Donate Now" button. If you would like to Virtually Adopt a bird, please visit our Virtual Adoption page for more information.

2 comments

Comment from: jana Lesco [Visitor] Email
oh my gosh, i think its great that you would take in birds that have been neglected, abused, ans so forth.
i hope you have luck in finding them owners, because im a little too young at 12 to have one.
thank you because i just love animals.
03/07/09 @ 12:20
Comment from: Laura M. [Visitor]
It's heart breaking to think of what people can do to these birds and it's wonderful to hear of what other people can and will do to help them. I have my own little Quaker named Quoth and we got him from a breeder who keeps track of all his birds. The people who originally took Quoth didn't want him for some reason after a year and a half so the breeder asked them to return him, but luckily my husband and I were looking to add a "feather baby" to our family after some research and we found him. I'm glad I didn't just go around the corner to the pet store and that my husband was able to visit the breeder a few times so he could see the environment my Quoth was living in. You are absolutely fabulous for taking in and caring for the beautiful birds that deserve the best.
16/03/10 @ 17:08

Leave a comment


Your email address will not be revealed on this site.

Your URL will be displayed.
(Line breaks become <br />)
(Name, email & website)
(Allow users to contact you through a message form (your email will not be revealed.)
World Parrot Refuge

XML XML Feeds: RSS, Atom

For The Birds Campaign Progress!

Target: 2,500 people to commit to $10/month 'For the Birds'! Click here to join in!

fundraising ideas
Free Thermometers

Please click on the thumbnails below to learn how you can help some special birds have a home for life through our "Virtual Adoption" program!

Alberta
Coco
Nikki
Lucky
Norman
PJ
Princess
Scarletta
Tiki


Birds who are now partly sponsored, thank you!

Mr Beaky has over 50% sponsorship now
Nike has 50% sponsorship now
Gigabyte has 50% sponsorship now


Birds who are now fully sponsored, thank you!

Iago
Athena
Elliott
Moon
Baby Ru
Cruiser
Daisy
PD


"The World Parrot Refuge is a true sanctuary where parrots live out their lives in a loving, spacious and happy environment under the guidance of extraordinarily caring people. The many visitors destined to pass through the refuge will come to understand that parrots are not toys or trophies, but beings with needs and emotions as real as our own."

– Rosemary Low (author of more than 30 books on parrots)

"This is, in a word, a great place and these miraculous creatures deserve no less, but few places can deliver it this well. It is, indeed, 'world class'."

– Stewart Metz (author and Director of the Indonesian Parrot Project), after his visit at the Grand Opening of the Refuge on August 13, 2005.

Get our newsletter!





Email Marketing by VerticalResponse

Visit Our Artists' Nest!