We've got oodles of cactus, but sadly no century plants here. Yucca flower spikes might work nicely, though. They're crunchy and hollow, and I bet that would be a lot of fun. (The fruit is very good, in my opinion.) Next fall I may have to gather some! This year it's too late, as the snow's already destroyed them. They're pretty fragile once they dry out.
We've also got a handful of willow species and plenty of cottonwoods, plus a stunning array of conifers. Most of them are renowned for being very aromatic and resiny, though - I always kind of wonder what kind of pine wood people are using that isn't full of pitch. We have Ponderosa, which has this wonderful sweet-resin smell, and some little scrubby kind (Limber, maybe?) that literally drips pitch eight months out of the year, and spruces and firs of several kinds. The internet at large seems to think one should not give parrots pine needles, which I'd think would be the fun part, but it shouldn't be hard to find some dead branches with bark to shred.
Last night, I ended up nabbing some freshly-cut ends of a scrub willow - fast-growing, straight, whippy little things (which don't seem to have a significant amount of salicilin*), braiding and baking them. Jetty seemed to approve of this. He got so excited when I brought STICKS in the house.
Source tells me that white, purple, and crack willow are the kinds with the salicilin in the inner bark.





