by Pajarita » Wed Apr 08, 2015 1:33 pm
I STRONGLY suggest you volunteer at a rescue where they have macaws so you can learn how to handle and read them because your experience with a lovebird is not really going to be of any use with your new bird. I don't mean to put you down or imply that you don't know how to handle parrots but these two species are like day and night and what you have learned to read in your lovie is not going to 'show' in a B&G. The biggest problem with inexperience and macaws is not only their size but their propensity to lunge and bluff which, unless you know their body language real well, you can misread and end up with the bird developing true aggression from the owner's fear of it as they are very needy birds which do not react favorably to aloofness (people start handling them less and less as they become afraid of them). Personally, I think this is the number one reason why macaws end aggressive and rehomed or in rescues because, in truth, they are the most laidback and easy birds aside from this little quirk of them. If you do a quick search, you will see that most macaws in rescues are from 5 to 10 years of age and this is because they mature very late and, when they do, they become self-assured and start showing behaviors the owners don't understand which changes the relationship dynamics tremendously, something the owners cannot wrap their heads around and attribute to the bird 'turning' on them (and getting bit from a lovebird is nothing but a little cut while getting bit by a macaw can mean facial disfiguration, half a finger, etc). I don't take in macaws because I don't have a birdroom large enough for them to fly (they require more than 30 linear feet) but I did rehabilitate two of them that were aggressive (a B&G and a BT) which I later rehomed and even though I am used to aggressive birds and are not afraid of them, I will be the first to admit that I was quite afraid of them at the beginning (those beaks are HUGE!).
Yours will be a baby (be prepared to handfeed and provide, at least, two different kinds of soft food served fresh twice a day) and you should not have a single problem with it until he gets to be about two years of age. After that and until they are 4 or 5 (when they are ready to mate), there will be gradual behavioral changes and these are the ones I am talking about so, as you can see, you have plenty of time to become an 'expert' macaw handler by 'practicing' on rescue adults.