by Pajarita » Sun Dec 13, 2015 1:12 pm
I don't think one could say reptiles or amphibians 'bond' with people but they certainly get used to the environment, care and humans they live with so, although they might not suffer the same as, say, a dog or a parrot would, they do, in their own way, get stressed out by rehoming. On another level, one learns one's limitations as one gets older so, sometimes, rehoming them is for their own good BUT it needs to be truly for their own good and the new home needs to be carefully screened!
And, yes, Chantilly, MBS is very common and understandable but the thing is that parrots change a lot as they become sexually mature and as they age so, even when we think that things are going well, that our birds are not giving us any real trouble so it would not really hard to have to care for another one, etc. this is more wishful thinking on our part than reality. I've had birds for ten years, 15 and 18 years and there is always one challenge or another. Aside from that, the species you want are the kind the bond really deeply to their human and, in reality, you don't know, at this point in your life, if your life won't change radically 5, 10, 15, 20 years from now. As a matter of fact, taking into consideration that you are a teenager, I think it's pretty certain that it will definitely change A LOT... going to college, getting a job, a boyfriend, a husband, children, moving from one home to another, traveling, etc - all part of growing up and most of them pretty unavoidable. I'll be honest with you, I don't agree with young people getting parrots. It's not that I don't think they cannot do a good job caring for them because I do! It's that I've taken so many birds from young adults that got their bird when they were younger, from people who got their bird when they were romantically unattached but then got into a relationship, from parents who had promised their kids they would take of the bird when they went to college, etc and they all honestly thought they would be able to do it but they were not. Just look at the rescues and all the birds you see advertised in Craigslist, Kijiji, the classifieds, etc! They all came from homes that had the best of intentions of keeping them forever...
So, concentrate on your bird and, if later on, you still want another one, maybe you can consider adopting a mate for her (has she been DNA'd a female?) so, if you are not there for her, at least she will have somebody to love her.