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Just a bit concerned but it sounds too good to be true in the web.
http://www.budgerigars.co.uk/manage/aloevera.html
What it says up there are health booster, dewormer, etc.

2007-01-20 14:40:52 · 6 answers · asked by nemofox614 2 in Pets Birds

6 answers

yes yes and yes.



a wonder

2007-01-20 14:43:43 · answer #1 · answered by USMCstingray 7 · 2 0

I give my African Grey Timneh Aloe 80 concentrate made by Lily of the Desert. He has liver disease and has a homeopathic vet now. Before, the traditional medicines and treatments were not improving his condition. In fact, he was so stressed by the treatments that I did not think he was going to live much longer. After changing his vet, he is very much still alive one year later. He gets four drops of Aloe 80 morning and night. He loves the taste, however, I can't stomach it. His liver numbers have come down from over 600 to a little over 200. They need to be down to below 50. We're hoping his liver test next week shows that to be the case.
Aloe has many health benefits, and is good for most every living thing.

2007-01-20 22:55:43 · answer #2 · answered by Animaholic 4 · 1 0

Been breeding cockatiels 20 yrs now never heard of that for worms or use in birds ever.

2007-01-21 12:45:32 · answer #3 · answered by reasonable-sale-lots 6 · 0 0

That sounds shady to me. I haven't heard of cockatiels having a problem with worms and as long as they are fed properly, housed properly and kept out of drafts, they are hearty little birds.

2007-01-20 22:44:18 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

OMG nooo it rele tastes disgusting but it is healthy

2007-01-20 22:43:11 · answer #5 · answered by luhb u much!! 4 · 0 0

Ask an avian vet.

2007-01-21 01:43:11 · answer #6 · answered by Tom 4 · 0 0

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