From what I’ve observed, it seems that parrots/birds have to explore and get familiar with their surrounds in order to find placed to land well, etc. Like they don’t necessarily have a good sense of judgement as to where and how things are in order to be able to land on them, etc., unless they explore the area(s) first. Sometimes I’ve wondered about their eyesight, as in how can they not also see that it is a door or window, has handles and window pains in order to indicate that. I haven’t quite pin pointed that yet, but I’m sure michael can give some insight to that. Eventually they do learn there is a window or door there, but also not always by flying into it. They explore the area(s).
My bird fell in the cage in the middle of the night just the other night, when the room was very dark because I did not have the night light on this time. This indicates to me that they probably feel around the cage while not in daylight, to feel where the perches are, if they want to climb down like to get a drink of water (which he does in the middle of the night at times too, if he’s woken up, then goes back up to sleeping perch and goes back to sleep). The fact that the night light was not on, he probably could not see as well; I’m really beginning to get convinced they have trouble seeing in the dark. I’m thinking he mis-stepped or mis-judged where the perch was in the dark, and trouble seeing in the dark, and that’s why he fell. He fell to the bottom of the cage, “thump!” and it woke me up, and I ran to the cage, even myself I was having a bit of trouble seeing where he was because of the darkness. I ran to the cage, picked him up, and cuddled, held, and checked him, making sure he was ok. He was, and he started cuddling against me. They do sometimes fall from their hanging chew toys within the cage, while swinging on the toys, etc. Each time I check him, make sure he’s ok, and make sure he hasn’t gotten any poo on him from down there in the bottom of the cage. He’s fine. I just will never ever again have in sleeping in a room at night without a night light on.
Each time he's fallen like from a hanging toy, or from when he's first gotten his nails clipped and has to get use to the new length (they fall), he's been ok, and he just climbs right back up again. But there were a few times where when he's fallen, I've noticed it was looking like he was trying to get one or the other wing ? ? back into place ? ? - - have ya'll ever seen this? Where they kind of move and circle their wing around, like the wing becomes out of socket? Or maybe it's a feather that's out of socket, and they're trying to get it back in socket again by moving the wing? And they can feel when a feather is pinched or bent a certain way and out of socket?
That’s a funny reply macbrush, about your motorcycle LOL.
cml wrote:UBRS? ^^
I think his issues are that he is used to living in a big aviary where crashing feet first into the aviary wall means landing on it. The effect is somewhat different when hitting a wall though, hence his crashes

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This sounds like a very logical explanation. It would make sense. He thinks that’s how he lands on walls, is to grab onto them with his feet… hmmmm …. This could be.
allirho I bet the cracked beak thingy could be what’s bothering him, why he doesn’t want to be touched around that area. It could be sensitive and/or bruised and in pain some, and until it heals, he’ll not want the area messed with, as he’s trying to protect it, and/or maybe the area to the touch hurts him until it heals. I hope you took him to the vet once you noticed what you thought could be some internal bleeding, and got whatever needed to be taken care of for his beak done. A birds beak is very sensitive, and they use it for a lot of things, and it is not a dead thing like our finger nails and toe nails. When we cut our nails, we don’t have pain. Birds beaks feel pain when they hurt them, even though the beaks are also strong. There are nerves in the beak. They use them to sense things, feel things, they use them a lot like we use our hands, to help them with things, to hold things, and they also use their beaks to test a perch/area first to see if it is steady before they step up on it, etc. They feel a lot of things with their beaks, and there are a lot of sensory things going on which involve the beak. Oh I see now that you’ve said you think the beak has healed ……. I would still at least have it checked out by a vet.