CONTENTS
Information
Bird Ownership Rants and
Advice
Taxonomy
Links
DONATE
YOUR BIRDS FEATHERS AND SAVE WILD PARROTS
DONATE
TO HELP STOP PDD, A DISEASE THAT KILLS OUR PARROTS
My
Macaws
Merlin The Red
Fronted Macaw
With Pictures & Movies
Chaco The Red
Fronted Macaw
With Pictures
Ariel The Greenwing
Macaw
With Pictures & Movies & Her Growth From Birth to
Weaning
To ease load time I have also included
direct links to specific portions of her life
Weeks 1-11
Weeks
12-28
Weeks
19-Present
Miscellaneous
A video of My favorite
Aviary Avalon
How To Get A Macaw To Take A Shower

Macaw and Bird Ownership In
General
Here
is a little disclaimer. Owning a bird, especially a macaw or
other parrot, is a huge pain in the ass. These birds live for
decades, are as smart as 3-5 year old children, and are messy, nippy,
noisy,
demanding little suckers. They are also going to go extinct
in
the wild. One of the few things the republicans did right in
this
country was to make it difficult or illegal to buy these guys if they
were wild caught.
(In 1992 George Bush Senior forced the country to stop
importing
appendix 1 animals from the CITES list, www.cites.org)
Why is that? Well, it is because they are captured,
barbarically, from their homelands and shipped to foreign
countries to become pets. The death rate for wild caught
birds is ~75 percent. Think about that, countries
who still
import wild caught birds have to bring in 4 birds to place one in a
home. We had the decency, in 1992, to outlaw this
barbaric practice. Our Asian, Middle Eastern, and
European friends did not do this. (Update, since the bird flu scare
Europe has also stopped importing wild caught birds.) The Middle
Easterners don't
even quarantine new arrivals which results in even higher death rates.
If you are a bird owner from one of these countries you
should
write your politicians and tell them to stop this practice.
Locals use tactics such as nest
removal, tree cutting, and shooting birds (hoping some will survive) to
continue
capturing these guys. In truth, they will always be wild,
even
the domestically born children of wild caught birds are always wild.
Unless you are willing to spend the next 50 years of your
life
dealing with the equivalent of a two year old, stay away. Have you
considered how difficult it will be to get away on vacations?
Birds are a whole lot harder to find qualified sitters for
than
regular pets. It
is
unbelievably rewarding to share your life with a parrot but requires a
great deal of patience. Too many of these intelligent little
creatures end up dead, abused, or in rescues. If you think
you
want one then do your research, skip pet stores, read allot, visit
aviaries, and think again. They are wonderful companions but are not
for everyone. Please, don't contribute to mistreating an
endangered species on the basis of what you read here. Jen
and I
spend our lives working with these guys. If you are not
willing
to do the same then don't bother adding to these fantastic creatures
suffering, THEY ARE NOT CATS OR DOGS. They will always be a challenge.
If you feel you have the
time, heart, and patience, then by all means help. They will be
extinct, in our lifetimes, in the wild. They will exist as a
viable species because of aviaries and private owners.
Remember,
you are about as closely related, genetically, to apes, as one species
of
macaw is to another. If your heart says yes but your patience
and
commitment say no then consider donating to The Gabriel
Foundation or
The Rocky Mountain Raptor
Association.
OK So you think you want a parrot Questions
to ask yourself
How about things that can AND WILL kill a parrot, are you ready to
change your life?
(Copyright: Birds of A
Feather Avicultural Society March 1998)
Parrot Killers
So, you've decided that the answer to all of this is that you still
want a bird. Get out there on forums and talk about them, one
to try is Parrot Chatter it
is filled with decent people and the conversations stay friendly.
One to avoid is Bird Board, the owner is censor
happy and rationalizes quelling discussion with utter nonsense so
don't
expect to get into any issues he
considers 'unpleasant' (generally the topics which are
actually
important to bird owners) but there are good people there in spite of
him. Also, don't decide on a bird based
on its appearance, get to
some
aviaries, visit the birds, let their personalities pick you.
Take
your time to decide which you want and never ever buy an unweaned bird.
Anyone who tries to sell unweaned birds is doing a bad thing.
It takes allot of practice and commitment to handfead a bird
and
besides the possibility of asphyxiating them you can traumatize them
emotionally if you wean them improperly. My last general bit
of
advice is to stay away from pet stores, they are in it for the money
and the birds can have all sorts of physical problems. Real
aviaries, although more expensive, generally don't see a profit and
raise birds out of love. Feel free to email me for any
advice.
Remember, you are taking on a lifetime commitment with a
creature
that may well behave like a 2 year old toddler for its entire life.
Finally, DO NOT CLIP YOUR BIRD!. It is never for the creature's benefit,
it's only for your own convenience and to tame your own fears.
You are depriving the bird of what defines it as a distinct
creature when you
do so and are effectively hobbling a creature. It is absolutely no
different than chaining your child to the bedpost. I hear a
lot of arguments about how it's for the safety of the bird or how
owning them is already unnatural and so on but come on.
Justifying it because of safety is a cop out, take the neccesary
precautions or don't buy a bird, if something terrible happens, well,
that's life. We don't spend all our days and nights inside
because we might die in a car crash, get hit by lightning,etc.
If you can't make your home safe for a flighted bird then don't
get one. If you must get one then get a rescue bird for whom a
second chance (even clipped) is better than it's present situation.
As far as the 'it's already unnatural argument'? Since when
does something not being perfect become a good argument for making it
even worse? A bird is a creature defined by it's ability to fly,
if you want one then cherish that simple concept and bring it into your
home as such or go get a land bound creature. Last of all, please
DO NOT email me for advice on purchasing a new bird if you plan on
clipping. My advice is don't get one or go get a rescue bird.
Buying and crippling a new pet is disgusting to me. There
is nothing like allowing one of these things it's natural right to fly
and having it CHOOSE to come over to you (as opposed to having to
because it can only move when you pick it up).
HYBRID RANT
One last little rant. Please don't
buy hybrids.
I spent a good bit of time thinking about the topic and have
come
to the conclusion that it is a bad idea. These birds may be
sweet
and beautiful but they dilute the gene pool of pure parrots.
Think about it, we have a limited breeding stock and the
birds in
the wild are being massacred. If they become
extinct and we
dilute the gene pool of captive born birds to the point where real
problems crop up in breeding them then we have effectively helped in
causing the extinction of a species. Since there is no new
flux
of wild birds into this country we must sustain the genetic purity of
those we have here. This might sound a little harsh but when
taken in the context of a slow, decades long process it is the reality.
I'm not against giving good homes to existing hybrids and
treating them with all the love and affection we can but I just think
further breeding of them is wrong.
A little Taxonomy To Classify My
Guys
I'm doing this to
demonstrate the actual genetic diversity in parrots. I
walk my guy regularly on a long harness I have modified to allow Merlin
to fly up to 20 feet from me, by attaching bungie cord so he doesn't
snap when he reaches the end. On these walks I am always
asked
'Is that a parrot?' I used to say that was like asking is
that a
dog but upon further study realized that wasn't correct. Dogs
all
belong to the same species. Macaws aren't even the same Genus
as
other birds like Amazons or African Greys. Cockatoos belong
to a
whole other family.
| Class
|
Aves (birds)
|
|
Order
|
PSITTACIFORMES (generically hook
bills and what
people think of as parrots) |
|
Family
|
Loriidae (Lories) |
|
|
Cacatuidae
(Cockatoos) |
|
Psittacidae (it
is this FAMILY to which my Macaw belongs) |
|
Genus |
Ara (Macaws) |
|
Species |
Rubrogenys (Red
Front), Araruana (Blue and Gold), Macao(Scarlet),
Chloroptera(Greenwing), etc |
If
you now stop to think all mammals form a class (whales,
felines, humans, mice, etc) and all primates form an order and humans
and
Lemurs belong to separate families within that order you can get an
idea to the genetic diversity displayed by what are commonly referred
to
as 'Parrots'.
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