ToolObservation

Track droppings changes without guessing from memory

One photo can help you observe the current state. Repeated photos make it easier to tell the difference between a one-off shift and a pattern that keeps coming back.

What this tracker helps you observe

Droppings are one of the first places owners notice change, but they are also easy to overread in isolation. Structured records make comparison calmer and more useful.

  • Color and texture shifts over time
  • Whether the same change appears repeatedly
  • How recent meal context may change the interpretation

What this tracker does not do

It helps you observe, compare, and keep a clearer record. It does not diagnose disease or replace an avian veterinarian.

If a change looks serious or keeps worsening, the next step should be veterinary follow-up, not more guessing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a droppings photo diagnose illness?

No. A photo can support observation and help you notice whether a pattern deserves more attention, but diagnosis belongs to a veterinarian.

Why track repeated photos instead of one?

Patterns are easier to judge than one isolated image. Repeated records reduce memory bias and make useful changes more visible.