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> My Parrot Stanley Sue Is Gone
Bob
post Jan 21 2004, 04:54 PM
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Group: Pet Lovers
Posts: 6
Joined: 21-January 04
Member No.: 208



My wonderful friend Stanley Sue, an African grey Timneh parrot, died at the vet's last Friday in the process of getting an x-ray. The vet did the best that he could, but the procedure was just too stressful for a bird that had been so ill for so many weeks. (We had to tube feed her twice a day so that she could get enough nutrients to fight her illness.) Our vet told me that her spleen and liver were enlarged, and he thought that she probably had cancer. I did not want an autopsy. I brought Stanley Sue home and buried her in the backyard.

Despite Stanley Sue's illness, which first manifested as pneumonia in early December, I don't believe she suffered much. In fact, I spent a couple of really nice afternoons with her last week. I would sit and read a book in the heated room that we kept her in, and she would crawl down the outside of her cage and 'steal' a grape or nut that I had placed on a tea cart next to her cage. She had an endearing mischievous attitude all along and was never anything but the essence of gentleness with my wife and me, even when we subjected her to something unpleasant like tube feeding.

She ate quite well on her own the last two days, and she really liked it when I praised her for doing that. Her pupils would contract and enlarge, she would tilt her head, and if I kept up the praise, she would bend down and nibble at her perch or the bars of her cage with a look of supreme pride and pleasure about her. The night before she died, she allowed me to scratch her head and neck for a long time after I had put her to bed. I had an odd feeling that this might be the last time I would be doing this, but I put it out of my mind. After all, she had seemed to be improving, and when I took her to the vet, I had been expecting good news.

African grey parrots are extraordinarily intelligent and perceptive beings. And as I think back, I am increasingly convinced that Stanley Sue knew that she didn't have long to live, and that she was as worried about me as I was worried about her. I think that she allowed herself to die at the vet's office, because she knew I couldn't take it to see her die at home. And she did many things over the last week or so that showed me she was trying to reassure me.

I've never had a rapport with another animal like the bond that I've had with Stanley Sue. In fact, in an odd way it almost seems demeaning to even call her an animal. She was a bright and vivid soul. She was one of my closest friends, and I am having a great deal of difficulty dealing with loss.

Thanks to everyone who reads this and to everyone who posts a response.

Bob
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Bob
post Jan 21 2004, 07:11 PM
Post #2





Group: Pet Lovers
Posts: 6
Joined: 21-January 04
Member No.: 208



Jennifer,

Thank you so much for your nice reply. I don't think most people understand how close of a relationship a person can have with a bird. Parrots can be incredibly loving, but they are not alone. I have a ring-neck dove named Howard who nibbles on my cheek and a hen who greets me at the door of the barn each day.

I can't even describe here the richness of my relationship with Stanley Sue and the degree of affection we could exchange with just a glance. So many of my routines of the day were intertwined with her, especially in the last few weeks when she needed so much care. That is what makes it especially difficult to get through this time.

If you would like to see a couple of photos of her, she is at http://www.enslavedbyducks.com/pages/chapter3.html and features prominently in a book I wrote about my animals.

Thanks again for taking the time to reply to my post, it is greatly appreciated.

Bob
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