I've always said that there is nothing "universally good" about parrots that I can explain to just any human who will then understand.
For example, dogs - they are good companions, will always love you and want to please you, and be your friend for life. Not everyone understands or would (or could) ever have a dog, but I can always say that, to explain why I have a dog.
But with parrots - there is nothing like that, that I can say.
I only have them because they are fascinating creatures, that I am interested in. Mine don't talk, they don't perform tricks, they don't cuddle with me, I don't have them because they are large and impressive (Saga is nowhere near that anyway

), and frankly, I have never found parrots to be good companions, and I've lived with 4 larger parrots, and about 17 psittacines as a whole in my life.
If you want a nice companion, dogs, cats, guinea pigs, rabbits etc. are better.
Right now, I am again wondering why on Earth I have a macaw. Or parrots overall, since the Meyers I've had for eight years bit me right by my eye a couple of weeks ago. I could have lost my sight on that eye completely, and I'm just twenty years old.

They are a PITA, they scream, make a horrible mess, cost loads of money, bite (even causing permanent damage), and are - the way I feel now - barely any fun to be around at all.
If I get a hand fed baby, do my best at socializing and training, work with screaming and aggression, would it actually be worth it?-which brings me back to my top questions. I know every parrot has a different personality and anything can happen. Would it stay tame after sexual maturity, enjoy hands on interaction, and possibly be an "ideal" pet as some people might describe their parrots?
PLEASE don't get a hand fed baby. Don't buy into the myth of a hand fed parrot being the "perfect pet", and don't feed the pockets of the breeders and pet stores when there are millions of unwanted birds.
I am going to sound harsh now, but look at it like this - for every one (1!) chick bought, one more bird will be brought into this world, because you bought a "product" that has been "sold out", so another one will be put in its place.
Then one bird in a rescue loses the chance of a home, since you could have taken it, but didn't.
And one bird will have to be put down (killed) or "thrown away" to god knows where because there is not enough room in rescues.
That is the harsh thruth, whether we like it or not.

Take in a rescue or rehome, and one less will be brought into this world (if no one bought the "products", no more would be produced), one in a rescue will have gotten a new chance, and one more bird can be taken into a rescue.
Also, hand feeding (parental deprivation) is not good for the birds at all and should not be encouraged. It is a myth created by breeders to give them extra money. If you remove the eggs or young from a pair, they will immediately breed again to replace the clutch they lost. Meaning more income per pair, per year.
Also, breeders often force-wean the young too soon, so they can be sold much sooner. More income for less work.
Also, they can charge much more for a hand fed, already tame bird, than for a parent raised one.
But hand fed birds will still scream, they will still bite, they will still hit sexual maturity and attack people, they may still pluck. In fact, hand fed birds do that more often, they have much greater tendency to become aggressive, fearful, neurotic, and develop behavior problems such as incessant screaming and plucking. (Google "Greg Glendell", one of the world's best parrot behaviour experts, and "Parental deprivation in parrots".)
I have had much better experiences with parent raised birds than hand raised ones. The hand raised ones view human hands as something to get food from, and they have neither bird skills ("people skills") nor any respect for your hands. (Note - respect is not fear, it has nothing to do with fear. Your bird should respect you and you should respect your bird, equally.)
A parent raised bird who has been tamed in a natural way (by trust, not forced from birth) learns a respectful relationship to humans, and they have the social skills in them, which they were taught by their parents. They also know they are
birds, and know how to behave like a bird, which causes less mental distress and frustration, and personally, I like my birds to act around me like I am another bird, rather than the bird trying to be a human.
It makes the communication much easier, it's better on the bird's psyche (and I quite like them preening my fingers, which my hand fed birds have never done).
