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Dr. Coates is a veterinarian based in the other “Sunshine State” – that's Colorado to the rest of you – where she lives and plays with a varied range of animals. She shares her professional and personal experiences, Monday through Friday, here on petMD's blog, the Fully Vetted. Log in for your daily dose of her insight and wisdom.

 

Peacock healthcare'”and partnership'”in suburban pet practice

September 24, 2007 / (4) comments


In case you’ve never been here, you should know that suburban Miami is full of peafowl. These critters, adored for their feathery good looks, have grown in popularity—and population—over the past decade. My neighborhood is full of them.

Most of them wander the yards, occasionally straying into the street when they need to cross it to find more fruitful foraging grounds. Who owns them? Someone did…at some point. But now I guess they just belong to themselves.

Sure, I have a young male who roosts on my roof every once in a while. But I don’t feed him. Nor does anyone else—not deliberately anyway (that I know of). They take care of themselves, eating whatever berries or castaway stuff they can find. It must work for them—they certainly don’t look unhealthy.

Last week I had one of my neighbors bring in one of the young’uns after he/she(?) was attacked by a neighborhood dog (not hers). The dog was in its own yard, in case you’re concerned we have a loose dog problem (for the most part, we don’t). Said dog was just doing his doggy thing—no blame there.

Now, this doesn’t happen often—neither dog attacks nor veterinary peafowl care (not in our hospital, at least). But in Miami, it’s the equivalent of finding a baby squirrel in your yard and wanting to make sure the creature doesn’t continue to suffer in another predator’s maw.

Still, we’re not exactly set up for peacock care. The avian vet’s is by far the best place to go. But some clients don’t want to spend avian specialist prices on stray peafowl. “Do what you can, Doc. Euthanize if you have to. Call me when you figure out what you want to do. And, whatever happens, don’t let me spend over $100.”

Of course I can understand this sentiment. $100 is a haul for a stray bird in most people’s books. But I just don’t know what to do for less than a Franklin. The visit? $48. X-rays? A $45 minimum. Antibiotics? At least $20. Anesthetics and wound cleaning? Another $100—if it’s really simple.

Somebody help me out here! All I can do for under $100 usually includes assessment and antibiotics or euthanasia. I guess that’s better than letting it suffer on someone’s front lawn. But it’s nowhere near ideal. So most vets find a way to keep their clients happy (and assuage their consciences) by sucking up the excess costs.

One of these days we’ll live in neighborhoods where community slush funds will go towards stray animal care. But given most people’s various approaches to the semi-wild creatures in our midst, even I’ll admit this falls into the category of extreme pipe dream. Until then, though, the squirrels, the peafowl, the stray cats and the almost-roadkill everywhere will continue to land in your lap and mine.

So next time you find a baby anything lying in a neighbor’s lawn, knock on doors and pass the cup before seeking professional assistance. Otherwise, you know it’ll be a project shared by only two entities: your family’s…and the vet’s. If you want to keep your vet a happy, willing partner in your numerous humanitarian projects, you’ll help her out as much as you can. Remember—partnership always gets you further than reliance.

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COMMENTS (4)
1
by on 09/25/2007 02:56pm

When I lived in Miami we didn't have peacocks, we had ducks, or have, my mom still feeds them regularly, but when they started getting out of hand someone took most of them away, to where? Who knows! (My mom wasn't very happy about it.)
Now that I live in Brookline MA, we have turkeys, wild ones. It is quite a site. 3 weeks ago we had an entire family of wild turkeys in the back yard, the mother and 14 chicks.

2
by on 09/25/2007 09:20am

hmac: Agreed. Go native. It's best. I make your same argument about feral cats on a regular basis. But there's something about a dying animal of any species that makes most of us want to do something to alleviate suffering and/or make it well. Sure, you can argue that euthanasia is the only reasonable alternative when trying to decide how best to allocate community funds--but that's not how it usually plays out when the creature is in your own two hands.

3
by on 09/25/2007 01:15am

Well, I've got another view of peacocks. I generally like birds - I raise finches and have all kinds of wild bird feeders and bird baths. When I lived in more rural reas I raised chickens.
But uncontrolled peacocks are filthy and destructive. They are more like chickens and iguanas than other wild native birds. A few are cute, too many are damaging to the native flora and fauna unless controlled. Peacocks are dirty, like chickens, and should be handled like chickens, e.g. penned. (I've raised chickens and would do so again if it wasn't illegal in my part of town. And I obey the law!) They eat everything, like iguanas. Say goodbye to your landscaping or gardens. Ask the people at Fairchild Gardens what they think of iguanas. The folks at the USDA were very happy about the coyotes who moved in and ate the peacocks, because the peacocks were becoming a nuisance by eating their plants and pooping everywhere and they couldn't do anything because peacoks are protected in Pinecrest. Peacocks also like to ding dark colored cars, damage not usually coverd by insurance.
Peacocks are fine - in a park. Just think of them as fancy chickens - do you want chickens in your yard?
Gee, I guess I'm suggesting coyotes. Just let the peacocks die, or let the coyotes eat them. Peacocks, who needs them. Native flora and fauna - I'll take them any day.

4
by on 09/24/2007 05:37pm

Better a humane euthanasia than what happened to the abandon peacock that adopted my father a number of years ago. A neighbor who decided it was too noisy decided to blast it off my parent's roof with a shot gun. Not only that... it took him two shots. Said neighbor moved not long after.

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About fully vetted

Patty Khuly, VMD, MBA

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Dr. Khuly is a former petMD blogger and small animal veterinarian in Miami, Florida, where she practices medicine at Sunset Animal Clinic and serves on the board of the South Florida Veterinary Medical Association. She is a graduate of Wellesley College, the University of Pennsylvania School of Veterinary Medicine, and The Wharton School of Business.

As a significant sideline, she writes...a lot. She authors pet health columns for USA Today, The Miami Herald and Vetstreet. She also writes a popular monthly column for Veterinary Practice News and serves as regular contributor to Veterinary Economics, The Bark, and the Veterinary News Network.

Dr. Khuly lives in South Miami with her brood of hens, goats, dogs, cats...and humans.

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