Setting Up the "Big Guys"
Heavy-duty food and water dishes or bowls that are made of
crockery or heavygauge stainless steel are a must if you don't plan on buying
new dishes periodically. These birds can pierce holes in standard aluminum feed
cups. At one point in time, many of us in South Florida began using concrete
food dishes. We purchased them from a concrete lawn ornament company. These were
not only heavy enough to keep the birds from moving them, they also were
believed to be indestructible. Most of us found out that due to the high
percentage of sand used in the lawn ornament concrete, the macaws and large
cockatoos were able to whittle them down to nothing, as if they were calcium
blocks.
The crocks or stainless-steel dishes will also have to be held stationary in
some fashion. Big birds take great pleasure in tossing their food and water
dishes to the far end of the cage. Trying to move a water dish up to the front
of the flight for servicing while a territorial macaw tries to nibble off your
fingers can add extra "excitement" to your morning feeding chores. This problem
is usually solved by containing the dish or bowl within some type of wire basket
so it can be removed only by you via a small outside access door, not by the
bird within the cage. There are also many metal dishes or bowls that can be
fastened to the cage in some way.
Nesting boxes, as well, cannot just be your standard bill of fare. Manufactured
sheet metal nest boxes, customized metal trash cans or barrels and plywood boxes
lined with wire mesh or metal are the choices most commonly used for destructive
species. Macaws and cockatoos will chew through an unprotected plywood floor
with little thought to the fact that their eggs will tumble to the ground below.
When choosing cage material, never consider anything thinner than 12.5 gauge.
This is available in a 1/2- by 3-inch mesh size. I prefer 10-gauge, 1- by 3-inch
mesh; however, some of the more determined greenwinged macaws have been known to
damage even 10-gauge wire. Also, much smaller umbrella cockatoos have, on
occasion, caused quite a few battle scars to appear on 12.5-gauge wire.
Aviculture is full of stories about how large macaws and cockatoos have "chewed"
their way through all types of "indestructible" wire cage material. The truth is
that chewing has little or nothing to do with this problem. There will always be
the exception to the rule, but most large macaws and the majority of cockatoos
will learn that they can bend the wire. They will also eventually learn that if
you bend the wires back and forth enough times, the wire will snap off at the
spots where they are welded. The use of standard 14- or 16-gauge wire mesh will
lead to the time-consuming task of having to patch repair the flight as
frequently as once or twice a week. Since the relative "bendability" of the wire
in the cage material is what makes it more or less breakable, the tensile
strength of the wire is almost as important as the gauge used. Unfortunately,
there is no reference on labeling as to the tensile strength of the wire that
you are buying. The only thing that you can do is feel how difficult it is to
bend in a hands-on situation. Most of the wire mesh I have seen that is imported
from Great Britain is of a much lower tensile strength than American-made mesh.
It also appears to have a much thinner coating of galvanization. It also has the
tendency to separate from the steel and crackle off when the material is bent at
greater than a 90-degree angle. I have cages made from galvanizedafter-welding
English wire that show rust on all exposed areas after only four years. On the
other hand, I have galvanizedbefore-welding (a cheaper process), American-made
wire cages that show no rust after 12 years of exposure to the elements.
Although the English wire mesh is cheaper, the cages made from it do not hold up
as well as those made from American-manufactured wire mesh. This is a definite
case of "you get what you pay for." This is especially true in the 16- and
14-gauge ranges.
Remember that even though most large parrots have the ability to adjust and
enjoy a happy life while confined to a large cage or flight, they enjoy escaping
from their flight cages simply for the pleasure of escaping. Once they learn
that breaking wire will allow them the freedom to sit on top of the cage rather
than in it, "chewing" apart their cages will become an impassioned and permanent
pastime-especially for a bird that is used to the life and freedom of a pet.
That's another thing that must be considered. The vast majority of these birds
will not produce successfully if they are permitted to double as pets.
Arizona Parrots, Tucson
AZ, 520-298-0379
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