Thank you Delfin I haver read this before
This is the reply I received when inquiring,all tho I believe what she is saying is true as I'm already going through some of these issues,I'm concerned that Jet is going to find it difficult to adjust as he is really fussy with his food and being with humans so much,but in saying that in the long run it may be best for him
Reply
Are you happy for us to send him to someone that will eventually house him in an aviary?
We currently have 5 very tame black cockatoos here that live in large aviaries and I honestly would not recommend them as indoor birds. They require too much stimulation and are very noisy once they mature, so require a large space to live in with other cockatoos and with someone on acreage.
I have someone in Victoria who would be perfect for him. He has loads of experience and large aviaries. I have attached some photos of his setup.
Your bird would start in the house and then slowly be integrated into an aviary.
Let me know what you think?
I replied I would rather him stay in a family situation as he is a fussy eater and likes to be with humans
She replied
I am about to explain something that unfortunately pet shops or breeders do not tell their customers. Basically what will happen with a male black cockatoo is that as he matures over the next few years (he will be an adult around 4 to 5 years of age) he will start to develop a very strong bond with someone in the household and behaviours such as, screaming for attention, separation anxiety, regurgitation, masturbation, feather plucking/mutilation & territorial aggression are just some issues household pet black cockatoo owners have to deal with. These behaviours are extremely hard to manage in a household environment.
In an aviary he has space to fly and spread his wings, he gets to experience rain, sun, all of nature’s elements that he instinctly requires, was built for and his wild species enjoy every day. He may also get the opportunity in his new home to get a partner of his own species too, so he can fulfil some of his natural instincts, which he cannot do with humans.
We have 5 black cockatoos here that have all lost their homes due to behaviour issues mentioned above. We have slowly integrated them all into an aviary environment. The 5 birds are left to be birds in their outdoor home and now thoroughly enjoy that environment. We go and interact with them every day, they are still tame and more than happy to interact and fly to us for treats.
With what we have experienced with surrender/adoptions, the outdoor aviary with human interaction is a far better option for a parrots health (mental, emotional, physical wellbeing) and is more likely to have a lasting home in this type of environment.
Based on my personal experience now rehoming over 20 black cockatoos & 100’s of other parrots for the behaviour reasons mentioned above, I refuse to rehome a black cockatoo back into a strictly house pet environment. These birds were never built to live indoors and we will continue to have issues of continually having to rehome them from home to home, if we keep putting them in this type of situation. He will live atleast 80 more years, so we are looking at a long-term situation that will give him a happy and fulfilling life, without having to be rehomed all the time.
If you still feel you want a home environment for him after reading this information, then you will need to find another avenue of rehoming, as it would only break my heart to see such a wonderful creature banished to live indoors. We can also refund you’re processing fee if this is the option you would prefer.
We hope you can see our point of view on this, which is that of any parrot professional in the field such as Behaviour consultants, bird trainers or Avian Vet.
When I looked at there birds for adoption they have other Toos but not RTBs this makes me think why I should be doing this for Jet.its hard to know what is best