Monday, October 13, 2025

Molting


This gnarly-looking parakeet showed up on our bird feeder yesterday. Dave saw it first and said, "That parakeet is filthy!" It's only when we looked closer that we realized it wasn't dirty, but was instead missing patches of feathers.

I think we're seeing an annual or biennial molt, when the bird loses its old feathers and grows new ones. For a while in between it looks pretty awful and apparently can be quite cranky. It surely must not feel good to have spiky pinfeathers coming through your exposed skin.


The funny thing is, you'd think they'd all be molting at the same time, but this is the only one we've seen looking this bad. Maybe the others are on a slightly different schedule.

I did some household projects yesterday, mostly cleaning, and trimming the monster on the patio. I collected a bag full of garden waste. (Look how open our patio looks in that linked post -- we have so many plants now, and big ones, that we can barely move around out there!)

I also sealed our green cherry tomatoes in a paper bag with an apple, in the hopes that at least some of them will ripen. (JayCee mentioned using a banana for this purpose; apparently apples have the same effect because they both exude ethylene gas, which promotes ripening.) I have no idea how long I'm supposed to leave them in there, but maybe I'll check back in a week or so. Eventually I'm going to want to eat that apple.

Today our property managers are supposed to visit the flat for "an interim visit report." I have no idea what the heck that's supposed to mean, especially since we just had our annual inspection two months ago. I suspect the managers, or possibly the landlords, want a look at a couple of things they've talked about fixing. Fortunately we don't need to be here.

Dave has parent/teacher conferences today and tomorrow. I'm not sure what I'm going to do, since there won't be many kids around -- maybe more book weeding. Some of you expressed surprise that we're already going on a break this week (after conferences), given that the kids just came back to school relatively recently. We're on a slightly different schedule from the British schools, so our mid-term breaks come a bit earlier.

7 comments:

  1. I don't know anything specific about parakeets, but if they have social structures like hens and other birds, it might be a case of the one you saw being the last in the pecking order, and others of his/her flock being responsible of the featherless patches. I hope not!
    Here, after the summer break school has started in the second week of September, and before October is over, they break up again for a week. I'll notice that mostly by how pleasantly empty the platforms and the trains on my way to work will be.

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  2. Poor parakeet! If he's a regular visitor you can keep monitoring his condition and see how he progresses.
    I check my banana / tomato bag every couple of days and replace the banana with a fresh one once it shows signs of becoming overripe. Some of the tomatoes are quite slow to turn red but they get there eventually.

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  3. I hope you have tidied up your flat before the interim inspection and hidden away all the seedy magazines and books you enjoy but never mention within the bounds of this blog. At work you just should wait till BBW tells you what to do - there will probably be just two words.

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  4. Do people in London complain about these 'foreign' parakeet, or have they settled in as incomers. Given the uprisings about foreign plants invading the countryside, the parakeets seem spotless in their behaviour ;)

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  5. I'm waiting patiently for the parakeets to reach Berkshire. I'm sure it will happen eventually.

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  6. I always find it amazing that parakeets exist "in the wild" in London!

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