Mr. Jean
Nitro Member
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2006
- Messages
- 833
- Age
- 81
- Location
- Reno, Nevada
Sorry to hear this Jenn. Sorry for your loss of a friend and pal.
I am sorry to hear about your cat. My family always had dogs and cats when I was younger and once I went away to school I got a parakeet and since then have had many different pets, primarily birds, due to their not needing to be let in and out, and no litter box.
About six months ago my current parakeet of 5 years started having seizures which I first attributed to "night fright" as they only happened in the dark. night fright is when a bird is startled by a noise but since they do not fly at night they panic and sometimes end up flopping around...
Anyway, once it happened during the day a vet visit was in oreder and come to find out my little green friend has epilepsy and requires two beak fulls of "birdie valium" each morning and night.
It is the "not knowing" that is especialy difficult with any pet as the communication we have with our animals may impart the result of a problem but not the details or the cause. Pets often become part of our family and it sounds like your cat was very much loved and well cared for.
Whiskers has a cat door. We went ahead and disinfected the door frame in case that's what helped open up that spider bit. Threw her blanket and her toys just in case there was some infection on the blankets.
I had no idea birds could have epilepsy. Is she friendly enough to hold? My mom's got a cocotail that's just the meanest bird. Can't hardly change her water or food without gloves.