pionus wrote:You have some good points in your post, but if you get a parrot when you are 70, than you will probably die before the bird, leaving a hopefully bonded bird in the hands of relatives, buyers, or shelters.
just sayin.
But, you are right in saying that new comers that have not established that they might have actually done oodles and oodles of research and are asking reasonable questions and want reasonable answers, never get them, only ridicule and people telling them that they are not ready because "they don't have a job yet", "their cat is predatory", and "YOU AREN'T READY BECAUSE I SAID SO AND I KNOW MORE THAN YOU BUT NOT ANY THING ABOUT YOU SO AM GOING TO SAY NO BECAUSE THAT IS THE OBVIOUS CHOICE FOR ME TO MAKE".
ok, i was exaggerating there a bit...
But really, people should be more open minded about how they address newbies questions.
Not everyone is the terrible person that is sooner to dump the bird as soon as they run into a ruff patch.
i dont think your exaggerating at all honestly. I would like to think that the people doing months of research are the good ones who will do a great job being a parrot owner. its the ones who does no research (or very little) who buys it as a impulse buy who we should be worried about and prevent.
there is a fine line between educating the new poster and just being ignorant.
even if they know you have done oodles and oodles of research and been researching for awhile, it still wont help change peoples minds.





