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Parrots are born to chew. From the
smallest parakeet to the largest macaw, they will gnaw anything they can
get their beaks on. Door and window frames, window sills, baseboards, drywall,
cabinet doors, drapes, blinds, upholstery, funiture, clothes, wires, ropes,
plastic objects, anything short of solid metal is fair-game for
the curious beak of an unattended parrot. A macaw can reduce the legs on a
solid mahogany coffee table to splinters is just a couple of hours.
You would be surprised at how fast a bird can learn to unfasten the latch
on their cage, and parrots who have done so when unattended, have been known to
totally trash the contents of a house or apartment in just a few
hours. This link to one of my favorite sites illustrates the
point.
Bad, Bad Frances
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The need to chew is a large part
of the reason for the high monthly cost of replacement toys. A medium to large
sized parrot can easily destroy a $20 toy in a day or two. Better toys
though, then the heirloom furniture handed down to you by your great
grandmother.
There are only two ways to prevent
this type of damage. The bird most be securely latched in a cage, or it must
be supervised at all times. At right are two pictures of our own dear
Captain chowing down on the shades in our livingroom. He was in easy eyesight
of the kitchen where I was preparing supper for the birds. I had turned my back
for only a few minutes, but it was ample time for him to destroy an
expensive blind.
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