I have been missing since July, when I went to Cornwall.
I still read the forum every day and tried to post as much as I could but there has been so much going on these last weeks, and not many good news to report.
When I came back from Cornwall (a 6-day camping holiday with Paul) I entered in a massive row with the Council (my landlord) over the way I use my rooms.
They don't want me to sleep in the living room where there is an open fire (which they consider potentially dangerous) and find it unacceptable that I prefer to sleep in a sofa bed in the living room instead of having a proper bed in my bedroom (which is the bird room). The fact that I use a room exclusively for my birds is something they simply don't accept.
I find unacceptable that someone else has the power to decide where I can or cannot sleep, in my own house. In theory, I should be able to sleep on a hammock suspended over the toilet bowl in the bathroom, if I like it.
After a lot of angry phone calls (in the meantime they blocked my gas supply so no heating), I spoke to a consumer association, and they told me: first you comply and do what they ask. THEN, after you got the gas supply back and avoided the risk of being evicted, you start writing letters, doing research, protest etc.
Seemed a good plan so I did that.
At that time I had 15 cockatiels and 2 quails. In a week I had to reduce the number of birds because if the Council found out that I have so many birds it was again eviction risk.
The aviary I posted about a few months ago had no problems taking the quails, but would only accept hen cockatiels because they are trying to reduce the number of males.
Last Monday I took the quails there, and I have to say they looked much much happier than at home. They are in the aviary with the tiels and a few alexandrines, all birds they know already, so they spend their time going inside (there is a part of the aviary that's heated and enclosed) and steal the tiels' food

Tuesday I had to give up three of my girls. Claudia was an obvious choice, I was sure she'd be happier there. Then I decided for Che, a rescue lutino girl with a difficult past who never wanted anything to do with humans.
The third was Sesamo, and you maybe can imagine how much I cried about it. But she seemed the only one who would have a better life in the aviary: here she was a loner, the other birds completely ignored her and she wasn't happy with me either.
Well, the results were amazing. She joined in immediately, one grey boy saw her and basically glued himself to her, and she seemed so much at home! I stayed there for about an hour, checking on them all, and not once they came close to me: they were too busy enjoying all the tielness around them, foraging, trying the new toys etc.
Claudia and Che were difficult to spot because they are not unique, but I was able to see Sesamo all the time, with those amazing colours and the weird crest

I took some pictures, they are not great because most of them are taken through the mesh, but they will give you an idea of what was going on with these girls.
I am uploading them now and will post as soon as they're ready.