entrancedbymyGCC wrote:Michael: hypothetically, if Kili were to fly away and get lost or suffer a flight related accident, would you change your mind about flight? Or do you accept that such a thing could happen and choose flight for its merits nonetheless?
This is an excellent question and every parrot owner should consider whether the parrot is flighted or not. I think some kind of flight related accident wouldn't change my mind about flight because I've had at least a one year good track record with flight. Actually Kili has crashed far less (barely at all) since being well flighted rather than when she was clipped and spooked. I may be a bit complacent about the risks of flight in my home but that is only because I've developed an environment and habits that ensure flighted-parrot safety. My biggest chance if anything is losing her when I let her fly at other people's houses because of uncontrolled variables. The comfort that I have at home may lead me to forget some important flight consideration when somewhere else because I don't think about them so much anymore (since it is established or habit).
I've flown Kili at home with exposed and even open windows (with closed screen though) and she has never even ventured near the windows let alone crashed into one. Honestly, I'm starting to believe the crashing into windows is a myth made by pro-clipping people because I hear them say it all the time and yet many flighted-parrot owners that I talk to never have any trouble since teaching their parrot about windows. One breeder that I considered to get a cape from refused to raise a flighted parrot claiming the window threat. Jean Pattison on the other hand told me it is just fine and she raises them around windows so they learn about them.
I have two doors leading to my apartment and a staircase between them so it is like a very difficult maze to get out that way. There have been times I left the top (but not bottom) door open and once again Kili never ventures that way cause it's just a boring hallway. So basically I think I have multiple safeways in place. First of all, I've taught the parrot through habit not to fly toward windows or out door. Second of all, I normally keep windows closed and shades closed as well as both doors closed when parrot is out. So I do feel pretty safe and it would take some miraculous series of events for the parrot to be able to get out.
The bigger risk if anything is when I take the parrot outside on a harness. The indoor freeflight I really think is 99%+ harmless but the outdoor carries several major risks. The one that is least in my control is the risk of predation. It is very small and I can reduce it further by keeping an eye out and watching the parrot keep an eye out. However, this one is the one big uncontrolled risk that I choose to take (topic for another discussion) but most of the other things are less of an issue I think. A lot of people with clipped parrots lose them to a gust of wind and since the parrot is so inexperienced with flight, retrieval is actually far more difficult. With the outdoor training I've given Kili, I am fairly confident that I would manage to retrieve her (eventually) just by recall and not by any physical means. Thus if anything, I think there is more safety from good training against loss than clipping.
I think the people that are at highest risk for loss are people who take an untrained parrot (especially not clipped) outside without consideration or who think their parrot likes them and will come back. I think the parrots with good flight capabilities, even if spooked, are much more likely to safely come back on their own. I have yet to gain personal experience on these issues but I do know from freeflying Kili in unfamiliar indoor environments, that I have been able to recover her without any difficulty. I still use extensive precautions but by having good training, that is a further safety net which a clipped parrot could not learn.
Understandably there are little or no statistics about these things and we develop most of our hunch statistics from stories we hear around. But from what I've heard around, a lot of clipped parrots get lost or injured as the result of clipping (taking outside thinking it is safe, crashing when spooked) than well trained flighted ones. I think if anything though, clipping sooner provides a false sense of security than consciously not-clipping because it forces us to think about and take the extra precautions that clipped owners can more easily sidestep (harness, windows, etc).