Last Updated on by Mitch Rezman
Busy beaks are happy beaks!
A minimum of ten toys should hang in a well-furnished cage.
Parrots should not be easily seen in their cage.
This their home and they should feel camouflaged as in the wild.
Parrots naturally live in trees allowing them to be heard, not seen.
Nests are built inside trees surrounded by more trees.
Here, young are raised in the safety of nature’s cover.
Good toys have different shapes and textures for the bird to explore and destroy.
At least three toys should make a bird work for food.
Working toys are toys that make them work for their treats or favored foods.
Parrots in the wild will spend the majority of their waking hours, hunting and foraging.
Why Your Bird Is Not Playing With Toys ~ Video
Toys stimulate their mind and help replicate actions they would execute in the wild.
Proper toys and placement enhance a Psittacine’s life in captivity.
Parrots think they’re working for food while avicultural outsiders sees birds playing with toys as birds playing with bird toys.
Your companion parrot is always thinking, and since nothing has changed in their minds, playing with toys is their job.
It’s what Mother Nature gave them to survive, this need to forage.
If you provide no means of foraging, your bird will seek other avenues. It may be furniture or personal effects.
Usually, because they are easy and plentiful targets. It’s important to encourage your companion parrot to work for food because it’s a natural behavior.
Three or four toys should be made of softwood.
Softwood allows you to push your fingernail in forming an indent.
The next toys depend on the bird.
Large birds like large macaws and Cockatoos may have a huge appetite for wood.
Introduce hardwood toys into cages and perhaps toys with hard plastics so they can spend more time on the various pieces.
Toys may be strung together with rope, leather, chain, or a combination of materials.
The balance of toys should be easily shredded.
Toys may be store-bought or homemade.
Parrot toy parts are available and help keep toy-making economical.
Softwood, paper, leather, and other textures are important for the bird to explore and destroy.
Introduce pieces of food like broccoli or corn, using one of many commercially available or homemade toy holders. The food on the toy holder rewards them for playing.
The more textures, shapes, sizes, and colors the better.
Diversity is important because in the wild your birds eat a diverse diet. An eclectic selection of toys helps maintain your feathered companion’s interest.
Watch a bird in its natural habitat and you’ll see them chewing soft bark and hard tree trunks.
The majority of toys should hang or be placed in the upper third of the cage.
Introduce a few more to the middle third (without hampering access to food dishes) around a perch made from softwood, comfortable to grasp depending on the size of the bird’s feet.
The bottom third of the cage should remain relatively uncluttered to allow the bird to walk freely.
Spot-check toys and perches on a daily basis looking for frayed or sharp edges that may potentially harm your bird.
The more you change the toy and perch arrangement, the more you challenge your companion parrot.
It helps them socialize and helps avoids “toy-phobia”
Parrots can develop phobic reactions to new people, new furniture, and even new birds.
Written by Catherine Tobsing
Approved by Mitch Rezman
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