Complete Psittacine Avicultural Apathy-The Signs And Effects Of Burn-out
Parrots magazine|June 2017

I began keeping parrots in earnest in about 1985. Before that, I had several long term pet birds, but did not really build aviaries and establish a full-on fl ock. I was working at Feathered Friends of Santa Fe from 1987 onwards and spending four months a year planting and building the small farm on the Big Island Hawaii. That is where I planned and began to construct my large planted enclosures.

EB Cravens
Complete Psittacine Avicultural Apathy-The Signs And Effects Of Burn-out

If you consider that my expert mentors always taught me to monitor and feed my psittacines two times per day, while washing water dishes out every morning, I calculate that I have fed my parrots, other aviculturists’ parrots, the Santa Fe Shoppe parrots, and miscellaneous nearby acquaintance’s pet parrots certainly at least 22,720 times for an average of 272,640 individual cages. This does not include years in the early eighties when I only had two to six pets, nor does it include going back to each cage to replace the cleaned water bowls.

Then of course, there are those two-plus decades of years when I was seriously maintaining breeding cages that had to be fed fresh food up to five times a day after baby hatch. And countless thousands of hours hand feeding baby formula to neonate chicks up to and beyond fledging and weaning time.

Am I 'burned out'?

So what is the point, one might ask? The point is, am I tired of devoting the major portion of my adult life to taking care of psittacines? Am I ‘burned out’ as the term in aviculture is commonly used? Do I resent all the years not being able to get away for long weekends, let alone normal vacation holiday times? Is it exasperating to have to get up and mix foods, then trot out to the aviaries to feed and water when I am under the weather or downright sick, when my bum knee needs rest or my lower back is out? Well, it often seems inconvenient, to be sure, but then so is having to weed and prune around the macadamia orchard trees or change the oil on the car when I would really prefer doing something else!

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 2017-Ausgabe von Parrots magazine.

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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 2017-Ausgabe von Parrots magazine.

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