Thanks, guys. The name's Jen, by the way.

Rebecca...Marvin is 17 weeks old. It's easy for me to forget that sometimes because he acts like a Big Boy in so many ways. I swear he is the calmest bird ever. I have yet to find anything that fazes him...except hot burners.
Michael...Marvin touched down on the actual burner. My sister was about to put a pan on it. Why she let it get to full heat before doing that is beyond me. She said Marvin was there for only about a second when the pain hit and he flew off. He sits on my shoulder in the kitchen every morning while I make his breakfast, but he has never shown any interest in flying down to the countertop or stove (he does like the sink) so I haven't done anything to draw attention, positive or negative. This time, however, the burner was bright and shiny and orange...his favorite color, unfortunately. He flies right to anything that's orange or yellow.
Kimberly Ann...I read on up burn care when I had my cockatiel. I also trained Marvin to allow me to hold his body with his feet hanging loose below, just in case he was ever burned or cut, since his instinct is to grab on. Man, did that come in handy. He was calmer than I was once I got him down from the ceiling. That part was awful...fly like hell, land, scream, fly like hell, land, scream...it felt like hours before I could reach him. I was also afraid the ice water could put him into shock, but luckily he loves ice cubes as toys (great way to get him to hydrate) so the cold wasn't unfamiliar.
The burner cage is an aluminum pie-cooling rack, a few inches bigger than the diameter of my largest burner, with three layers of aluminum foil covering everything. If a burner has been on, the cage goes over it until it cools to room temperature. It never gets hot enough to burn anything/-one.