A Happy Quaker Parrot Couple
Quaker Parrots, also known as monk parrots, and often mistaken for parakeets, have very little in common with the typical parrot. They don't nest or live in trees, preferring the cliff and canyon walls of their native South America. They are not territorial, happily sharing their living spaces and even their nests with other species of bird. They are prolific breeders that can live between 20 and 30 years and, for this reason, pet Quaker parrots that have gotten loose from their owners have become a problem in major cities. Specifically, New York City featured a special TV segment showing these birds populating the roofs and ledges of large buildings throughout the city. While it is illegal to trap parrots living in the wild and take them across international borders, it is perfectly legal to catch and keep one of these parrots that has gotten loose and gone feral. Because typical methods to trap parrots don't work on this species here is a guide on effectively catch a Wild Quaker Parrot.
Instructions
Catching A Wild Quaker Parrot
1. Look for the large communal nests that the Quaker parrot builds. These nests are often over 200 pounds and can comfortably hold up to 50 birds. This species of parrot is incredibly social so it's unlikely you'll be able to get one by itself. As already stated, these birds prefer high roofs and ledges, so that is where you should begin your search, although it's best to have some idea of where they're nesting in the first place.
2. Smear peanut butter across about a foot of one end of your stick.
3. Sprinkle bird seed and berries on the peanut butter. Try to get as many to stick as possible.
4. Attempt to trap the parrot at dawn or dusk once you've found a nest. These are the times of day that parrots are most likely to meet back at the nests.
5. Don't directly approach the nest. Hold the stick a few inches off the ground, berries pointing toward the nest. Keep the pillow case or blanket ready in your other hand. Your carry cage should be nearby
6. Slowly approach the nest once the parrots have determined that you're not a direct threat. Pause for about thirty seconds between steps. Keep the stick out in front of you.
7. Place the end of the stick in front of one of the parrots when you're close enough. They are very inquisitive creatures and the bird will hop on and begin to eat. Make sure the parrot is on the highest point of the stick. These birds have a tendency to travel upward to the highest point of a perch, if that leads to your hand then you're apt to get bit.
8. Retract the stick closer to your body as the parrot feeds and slowly drape the pillowcase over the bird. Sharp or fast movements will panic the bird, but slow movements won't bother him.
9. Set the stick down and grip the bird's body through the pillowcase. Try to wrap it up as well as possible.
10. Quickly get the bird into the carrying cage, pillowcase and all. Close the cage and get away. The bird will likely have been making distress calls when you started to wrap it. If the other parrots nearby figure out what's happening you might get mobbed. It's not particularly dangerous to you but you don't want to accidentally hurt any birds that might smack into you.
11. Take your bird home and wait for it to calm down. Make an appointment with your vet for a checkup to ensure the bird is in good health. With this done you are free to see to the bird's care and training.
Related posts
Late in 1967 a shipment of wild Quaker parrots that had been imported to the United States to be sold in pet stores were inadvertently released at Kennedy airport. Since that time wild Quaker parr...
Quaker parrots are the only parrot species that builds nests in the wild. Quakers will build elaborate shared "condos" with a section for each mated pair of birds. In captivity, some qua...
The most famous colony of feral Quaker Parrots lives in San Francisco.Quaker Parrots, more commonly called Monk Parakeets, are usually green and about one foot long. They are native to Argentina b...
It is said by many owners of the blue Quaker that they have found blue Quakers to be sweeter than the standard green Quaker; however, according to Theresa Jordan, an expert author in avian behavio...
Although less common in recent times, some pet stores and parrot breeders sell animals that were either born in the wild or raised without human interaction. Wild-caught birds exhibit fear toward...