Please forgive this incredibly long post as I do have a specific question but want to give some background.
My friend and I have lived together for twenty years and we never even had a dog because we did not feel that we could give it the right amount of attention. A short six months ago a woman offered my friend a bird, her parrot because she was moving to the west coast. My friend told me that he had a parrot when he was a child in Brasil and after some thought he said "I want this bird." and I said, “sure!...Great! we can’t have a dog, but I guess we are getting a bird.” And I thought: Birds are pretty to look at I guess, sits in a cage all day, all you have to do is change the paper sometimes, maybe it talks, sounds like it might be kind of interesting.
The lady dropped off the bird with his cage, a few toys, some food, and a very basic book on amazon parrot care. I did not even catch the parrots name because of two language barriers. The woman gave us a beautiful seven year old Red Lored Amazon that we rechristened “Primor”. The former owner did say that the parrot had been confined to his cage his whole life, he was not handled because she was afraid of getting bit and they tried one other home before us but the person could not keep him because of his screaming.
In books and on line, from Primor and now thankfully with this forum I have been trying to learn as much as I can about the care and companionship that a parrot in captivity needs and deserves. In six months’ time slowly building trust, Primor has lost his fear of being handled, never bites or scream any more, he is so sweet, so well behaved. he loves to play by himself shredding a 1X pine block or with toys that I make. He loves the affection and physical contact from both of us equally without being too hormonal about it. Primor gets plenty of supervised sunshine in his cage on our deck and he has plenty of open cage time in the house when one or both of us are home and that is a good portion of the day. Primor really was one content parrot but he was in for yet another lifestyle change.
Only two months ago someone heard that we took in a parrot and wanted to know if we would take his blue and gold Macaw. Like Primor’s former owner this man tried another home but it did not work out, he was not interested in us trying to find his macaw another home; he would only give the bird to us, For a one month trial if we like. After some research I warned my friend against it. It sounded like a bigger bird brings much bigger problems, bigger beak, bigger mess, bigger everything and most of all I did not want it to have negative effects on Primor, the bird that we already made a commitment to.
After some thought my friend said, “I want this bird” and I said, “Sure!...Great! we couldn’t have a dog but I guess we are getting another bird” and I thought this should be interesting. The owner gave us his nineteen year old blue and gold named Max without a cage, saying that the macaw has been on his perch his whole life. Max’s “perch” consisted of one three foot tall post and a one branch perch with his food bowl and water bowl on each end of this one branch. In other words he was trapped between these two bowls on one branch with just a few short nubs jutting off of it. One of these nubs disappeared at some point and all that remained was the lag bolt that the bird was chewing on! They were letting him damage his beak on a ¼” lag bolt. The first thing that I did was to add a perch to cover the lag bolt and I then added perches to move his food and water bowls further out, as well as perches of various diameters to give him more places to go. The second thing I did was to change his name from Max to Maximo.
Maximo is working through some biting and even worse than his huge beak is the blood curdling screaming, but nothing that we can’t solve with time and effort, I hope. Max is another bird that was neglected, not handled out of fear, but like Primor, Maximo has become super affectionate and playful with both of us and Primor has adjusted incredibly well to another bird in the house; if anything I think it expanded his world. I never dreamed that I would have two birds and now I have the extreme pleasure of having two Parrots, fooling them into thinking that this captive existence is where they belong and where they can thrive.
So my concern is about Max on living his perch 24/7, Most of all as incredible as this sounds because his wings are not clipped. The former owner never had his wings clipped and swears that he NEVER flies. I have read a few similar posts on the Parrot Forum but none quite like Max, an unclipped Macaw without a cage. I realize that every bird and every circumstance is unique. I also know that I need to provide him with other fun bird safe places to go besides his newly refurbished perch and this will not be too difficult because I can see that he is very adventurous. my final thought is that clipping Maximo’s wings is not really an option as I think he is very confidant and I believe the whole process would not be good for him.
And my question is this: should we be working towards getting him in a cage for his own safety and perhaps to sleep? Or is this not even a question but just an unequivocal yes?
Thank you so much for taking the time to read all of this, and your thoughts and feedback would be greatly appreciated.
Robert





