-=> Quoting Barbara Howell to Pete Hopping <=-
BH> Reading Hot Zone definitely reinforced my opinion that I do not want
BH> to raise mammals, especially primates. Once I thought I might want to
BH> raise marmosets, but this definitely caused me to swing over to a big
BH> NOT.
I wouldn't want to raise any sort of real exotic animal, particularly
one coming directly out of any of the rain forests. Of course, that
happens to include parrots, doesn't it?? :-)
BH> My dad's a retired fire dept captain. He's 78. Did 35 yrs on the dept.
BH> One of my first remembered games/toys was "first aid"/nurse with a
BH> 1960 ARC first aid manual and dolls, pets, anyone sitting still.
BH> Eventually I did go to nursing school and become a nurse and now a bird
BH> mommy/breeder.
Sort of the same here. My dad was very active in the volunteer fire
dept and did a lot of ambulance work. I did the "first aid" playing
too...also with an ARC manual, and with my dad's WWII navy corpsman
manual. There was an army surplus store down the street from my house
and I used to go in there and buy roller gauze by the carton, as well
as battle dressings and field surgical packs.
Just as soon as I turned 16 I joined the volunteer fd and did
mostly ambulance work. After high school I worked in an ER and when the
EMT thing came along, I grandfathered in as an EMT instructor, having
taken and passed a very rigorous qualification exam.
PH>medical stuff. There is a newer book out titled "The Coming Plaque"
PH>that addresses all of the emerging superbugs and viruses, and THAT one
PH>scared me even more. I don't recall any avian viruses mentioned, though.
BH> Oooh, I will look for it...
PH>I live about an hour away from the Jaax's and I was thinking that I
PH>would probably buy a bird from them when it comes time to buy, since
PH>they're vets and disease-savvy, and from what I read in "Zone," I
PH> One of their birds, Herky, was mentioned
PH>in the book.
BH> Was that the Amazon?
I seem to recall that "Herky" is a hycinth macaw.
PH>In "The Coming Plaque" the author wrote that whie Ebola Reston is
PH>deadly to monkeys and does seem to spread via air, it is now considered
PH>to be a mutated virus harmless to humans. I dunno about that, but none
BH> Except that several people did test positive to it. But you're right,
BH> they didn't suffer any definitive harm. Some got sick, but it was
BH> never determined if this was coincidental or if this was from E.
BH> Reston.
Right. One guy had what was diagnosed as an acute MI (heart attack, for
all you non-medics out there :) ) and another guy just had symptoms of
a bad case of flu. I seem to recall from "Plague" that every single one
of the animal caretakers there did eventually test positive for E.Reston.
BH> You also have to understand the routes taken in animal shipments to
BH> figure out what happened in Reston. None of those monkeys were African
Yeah, and that is what doesn't make sense...what are monkeys from the
Phillipines doing testing positive for the Myinga strain of E. Zaire?
But as you said, the wharehouse had all sorts of problems with their
air handling equipment, so who knows?
At least (so far...) parrots don't seem to vector too many species-jumping
bugs other than parrot fever, or that parasite that spreads in droppings.
I'm not up on the medical aspects of parrots yet.
... Sex: Male ( ) Female ( ) Not Enough (X)
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