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Post by Jane on Mar 11, 2021 4:30:04 GMT -7
I took Mitzi into the kitchen to weigh her. She is used to this but there was a small piece of lightly scrunched up cling film on the worktop next to the scales which she wasn't keen on.
Jane
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Post by Haz on Mar 11, 2021 14:50:02 GMT -7
Chy would have tried to bite it.
Haz
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Post by Justin (z00ropa) on Mar 22, 2021 4:28:51 GMT -7
I don't know how Greys in the wild don't die of stress as soon as they can fly. Everything is so scary. They were working on the street outside of our house and Ash could see the part of an orange traffic sign and she wouldn't stop doing her terrified screech for 30 minutes.
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Post by chris on Mar 22, 2021 8:05:09 GMT -7
I don't know how Greys in the wild don't die of stress as soon as they can fly. Everything is so scary. They were working on the street outside of our house and Ash could see the part of an orange traffic sign and she wouldn't stop doing her terrified screech for 30 minutes. This is a great question. It seems universal that AG's don't handle change and stress easily, and yet they would seem to be a great survivor success story in the wild (until humans started capturing them). Maybe in the wild when they are in a big flock they distribute the stress but when with us they feel the need to worry about everything.
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