Menu
Shopping cart
This is the Header Notice module, use it for promotional or other important messages.
×

Versele Laga NO PICK

Versele Laga NO PICK Versele Laga - Oropharma

Versele Laga NO PICK
10.95€
Versele Laga NO PICK
  • Availability: In Stock
  • Brands Versele-Laga
  • Model 763
  • Reward Points: 3
10.95€
Pide por teléfono
95 513 24 03
Horario de Lunes a Viernes de 07:00 a 15:00

Entrega gratuita para pedidos superiores de 50€ (España Peninsular)

Elije tu forma de pagar
                      

Oropharma No-Pick is a bitter spray to prevent feather picking.

This product protects growing chicks from their parents plucking their feathers, and helps prevent feather pecking and self-mutilation. The fact that your birds pluck their feathers can have several causes. However, we can make a clear distinction between the plucking of growing chicks by their parents, and the pecking of their own feathers primarily by adult Psittaciformes.

No-Pick is very effective against the plucking of growing chicks by their parents.

This easy-to-use spray has an extremely bitter taste, which eliminates the instinct of parents to pluck their youngsters' feathers.

There are many possible causes for chronic feather pecking. It can be the result of stress, frustration, a dietary deficiency, or a combination of several factors.

See a vet to find the real cause, as breaking the automatic feather-picking reflex requires total focus! In addition to offering your birds a greater number of activities, adapting your rooms to the format of your birds, adjusting their diet and regular bathing of your birds.

No-Pick is an ideal support due to its extremely bitter taste, which discourages your birds from picking at their feathers.

How to use

In case of chronic feather pecking: spray the birds once a day.

ATTENTION! Do not spray in the eyes or on the beak.

  
 
 

packing
 

 
    Spray 100 ml

Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry. Lorem Ipsum has been the industry's standard dummy text ever since the 1500s, when an unknown printer took a galley of type and scrambled it to make a type specimen book.