I live in a house. I live on the third floor. The Fourth floor including the basement. Well for now I am home mostly, but within a week or two I will be out from 7 am until 6pm. I wanted an umbrella cockatoo, or an african grey. I've just always fancied those. Maybe because I never knew about the others, and once something is in my head it it. I also read about the teflon so I know about that. I don't use that. I'm old fashion. The MAIN issue is going to be the burning oils or incense. My mom burns it it due to her faith, and that's not going to happen it stopping. Oh well :02:
I'm not sure what the 'oh well' is for? By burning the oils and incenses your risking causing DEATH to a parrot. These are known toxicities, not because they make them sick but because they kill them (that is what we mean when we say something is toxic its known to cause death). With that work schedule you will not have enough time for an Umbrella, they require at a minimum of at least 3 hours of one on one attention a day. Birds rise when the sun does and most like to go to bed when it sets or they can get very grumpy. If your bird wants to go to bed at 8pm then its not getting near enough attention with your upcoming schedule (birds aren't a weekend thing they are an everyday thing). If an Umbrella isn't getting enough attention, it will scream all day (if the bird is in your house you will be able to hear this scream from inside your neighbors house) also Umbrellas are known to pluck out their feathers when they are unhappy as well. Make sure that the people living on all floors of the house can handle listing to a bird as the noise will not be contained to one floor and will be heard throughout the entire house.
I'm not trying to dissuade you from getting a parrot in general but parrots require a great deal of time (especially the umbrellas and moluccans) and you need to be prepared for what it takes to have one. A lot of times people get them and don't realize what their needs are and then they end up in rescues. I spend at least an hour a day preparing food and cleaning cages (I only own one bird). The I spend another 3 hours being around my bird, her just hanging out, training time and one on one cuddling time. Then she spends about an hour with other people in the household as she is very social. This is a total of 5 hours of my day devoted to one bird, every day - and this will be for the rest of my life. My bird is 16yrs old and will live somewhere between 60-80yrs old (probably outliving me). The larger cockatoos require this kind of time devotion in order to have their needs met. I'm not trying to offend you, I just want you to know what it takes to have a large Cockatoo (the rescues are absolutely full of Cockatoos because they are not easy parrots to have). I don't and have never owned a grey, so I'm not sure of their time demands (I hear from some people that they are more independent of the parrots but I really don't know first hand to give you advice on a grey). Life with parrots is fulfilling and completely rewarding but make sure that you can fully meet the demands of which ever particular bird you choose - as you are making a life long commitment when you get a parrot.