Blog
Parrot Selection
Choosing the right parrot, which will be your friend for many years, is very important for your satisfaction.
The parrot to be purchased must first be observed from afar. A healthy parrot is all about its environment. Her eyes are alive. Occasionally, it straightens its feathers with its beak. It is generally mobile. At rest, its feathers are slightly fluffy, perched on one leg. Responds to sound stimuli. Sick parrots, on the other hand, are unrelated to their surroundings, fluffy feathers, perched on two legs, and indifferent to stimuli.
The feathers should be shiny, not plucked, lively and smooth. There should be no dwarf hairs between the hairless areas on the head and the well-ordered hairs on the body. The appearance of the feathers is an important indicator for many diseases.
The nostrils should be of normal width, equal length and clean. There should be no obstruction or discharge.
Fingers and nails should also be checked. Parrots generally perch holding two fingers in front and two fingers behind. Finger deformities cause perching and mating problems. Large parrots use their claws as hands, and they feed by opening the shells of crustacean foodstuffs.
Ayaklarına bakarak papağanın yaşı hakkında fikir sahibi olunabilir. While the feet of young parrots are small and less rough, the feet of older parrots are large, scales are seen and the scaly areas are raised in places.
What Should We Consider When Buying a African Grey Parrot?
The most important difference that distinguishes the young African Gray Parrotfrom the adults is the dark iris color. While this color is gray-white in young people, it first turns white and turns yellow as the age progresses. The gene gray parrot, which is 18-24 months old at the beginning of the yellow color, has caught up with its parents in terms of physical size and weight. After the age of 2, age is difficult to determine by outward appearance. These times usually apply to other large parrots as well.
Ideally, you would buy a hand-raised baby parrot and train it yourself. Old, wild-caught parrots have a certain social life and habits in their lives before the cage. It will be very difficult to change these habits that are ingrained in their personalities and to adapt to the cage life of the parrot. It can take months for parrots caught by hunters to gain their trust in humans.
There are also many different psychological differences in the choice to be made among gray parrots. Red tail gray parrots are more prominent.
Be Careful When Adopting a Parrot
Do not rush when making a decision. Give yourself time to make healthy and correct decisions. This period may be 5-7 days. If possible, visit the parrot at regular intervals and observe whether there is a significant problem. Normally, imported birds begin to be exhibited in sales places after a 30-day quarantine period at the wholesaler. You’re more likely to get an unhealthy parrot if you hurry, as this rule is often not followed and the forage birds are sent to the market right away.
There are some tricks to understanding whether the parrot you are going to buy is a newly caught wild bird, a hand-reared baby, or a pet parrot that has been bought and kept for a while by someone else. Although wild parrots vary with the time they spend in the cage, when approached, they will stretch their neck towards you, fluff their feathers and make an unpleasant, snarling sound, or run away from you. You will need a long time and patience to tame it. The price of these parrots is the cheapest.
What should we pay attention to when buying a parrot
Hand-raised cubs and adult parrots domesticated by someone else do not growl when approached. They don’t run away from you when you move slowly, and they even ask you to pat their head by tilting their head towards the wires of the cage. This is an indication that the parrot trusts people. These parrots adapt easily to you in a shorter time and with less effort. The prices of these more valuable parrots are also high. The price will increase in parallel with the excess of her speech and vocabulary.
Do not believe that the parrot you are going to buy speaks without hearing it with your ears. But since parrots are living creatures, they do not speak whenever asked. Gray parrots, in particular, are extremely reluctant to show their talents to strangers. With their introverted character, they do not like to be the center of attention for long periods of time. If there is no coercion, after a while they start to speak on their own. So you should give it some time.
Whichever type you choose, the important thing is to warm up to the parrot you will buy. Do not forget that you will spend many years with her.
When transferring the parrot you bought to its new place, bring the bird to its new place without holding it by hand. After the transfer is complete, wrap the cage around the cage with newspaper and take it home that way. Thus, you will both protect the parrot from the air flow and ensure that it comes home without frightening it.