Piling wrote:I bought him sunflower seeds, as a food complement with its bulghur. I suppose it is full of vitamins and good for recovering.
The next time Pirouette brings me a thing alive, I let her eat it ! That is Darwin law : cats catch weak and ill preys and clean species from insane elements.
I do NOT believe you could just sit there and watch Pirouette kill a bird
Piling wrote:I bought him sunflower seeds, as a food complement with its bulghur. I suppose it is full of vitamins and good for recovering.
The next time Pirouette brings me a thing alive, I let her eat it ! That is Darwin law : cats catch weak and ill preys and clean species from insane elements.
I had never heard of Newcastle disease until you mentioned it
Londoner wrote:Piling wrote:I bought him sunflower seeds, as a food complement with its bulghur. I suppose it is full of vitamins and good for recovering.
The next time Pirouette brings me a thing alive, I let her eat it ! That is Darwin law : cats catch weak and ill preys and clean species from insane elements.
I pray he/she recovers. Did your cat bring it home? I do believe in the concept of 'let nature take it's course' but don't have heart to implement it. Many times my cat, Faty, brings home live rats or birds. I always catch him and open his mouth by force to release his prey, which if it is a rat, I throw it inside a pile of tissues outside my house boundary. The birds fly out through the window. He eats a best food and never becomes hungry. He catches preys just to play with them. The first time he brought home a rat. He killed it after a long torture and didn't eat it. After that I never again let him to torture his victims.
Londoner wrote:I had never heard of Newcastle disease until you mentioned it
Neither do I. Here is something new to learn. cats become diabetic. I discovered my cat, Gaby, the mother of Faty was diabetic. She has never become sick in her life. she is at least 16 years old. The last time she saw a vet was when she was muted, which was at least 14 years ago. Luckily one of my former lodgers when visited me told me some thing was wrong with her. Because she thought Gaby was a lot fatter before. At the same time I noticed she was becoming sick once or twice a week. Before she hardly became sick. But now she is recovering. she is more active and bright. She gets two injection a day. I take her back to the vet in a few days time.
Londoner wrote:I pray he/she recovers. Did your cat bring it home? I do believe in the concept of 'let nature take it's course' but don't have heart to implement it. Many times my cat, Faty, brings home live rats or birds. I always catch him and open his mouth by force to release his prey, which if it is a rat, I throw it inside a pile of tissues outside my house boundary. The birds fly out through the window. He eats a best food and never becomes hungry. He catches preys just to play with them. The first time he brought home a rat. He killed it after a long torture and didn't eat it. After that I never again let him to torture his victims.
Suddenly Cameron heard a tremendous crash. He turned around and Sam was gone - as was the railing she had been leaning against.
He ran over and saw Sam lying on the concrete floor, two storeys below - a fall of about 6m. Cameron screamed and ran down. When he reached Sam he saw that she had bitten through her tongue and her eyes had rolled back into her head. "She had this huge lump on her back and I realised that she had probably done some really horrific damage to her spine," he says.
Sam's blood pressure was too low to operate. Her skull was fractured in several places, her brain was bleeding and bruised, both lungs had ruptured and one had collapsed completely. Her spine was shattered just below the shoulder blades.
Sam and the boys were visiting her mother. It was a very windy day and as they were heading home Noah, her middle son, spotted a baby magpie that had fallen to the ground. So they picked it up and took it home.
"We called her Penguin because she looked like a penguin," says Sam. "She was just white and fluffy and had really big feet."
Piling wrote:There is no medication pour Newcastle disease, only vaccine, but it is too late now. So the only ways is
1/ kill it (might be the authorities decision) or 2/ let it in a closed place where it might recover until it is not contagious. I read that after 6 weeks it can be stated as healed so not a danger anymore for other birds.
The only point is to know if after 6 weeks, it will have nervous sequels or not. If yes, I wonder what I am going to do with a disabled bird and a terrible hunter cat in the same house. I should find a charitable pigeon lover for adoption, lol.
Piling wrote:It is eating and drinking as a pig, lol.
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