PICKLES & MR. BELVEDERE
PICKLES & MR. BELVEDERE
QUAKER PARROT & COCKATIEL
This is Pickles & Mr. Belvedere.
This is what we know about them:
Nothing. We have no information on them whatsoever. They were found in a home with a deceased owner, and we don’t have anything on them, including names, ages, or any sort of history.
The quaker, whom we are currently calling Pickles because he deserves to have a name is silly, and talks when you talk. He seems to be well socialized, and interested in what we humans are doing.
The Cockatiel seems to be pretty sweet and occasionally steps up.
We’re not sure if these two are bonded yet. We’ll keep an eye on them to figure it out before any subsequent adoptions happen.
Age: Unkown
Sex: Unknown
Prefers: Males or Females? Unknown
Other Bird Aggressive? No.
Cage Aggressive? No.
Adoption Fee: $450 - Quaker, $125 - Cockatiel, or as a pair $500 if they’re bonded.
Cage Available: Affordable used cages available to purchase starting at $100.
SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS:
Quakers are illegal to possess in some states. Make sure your state is not one of them before applying for him.
***Information that is universal to every bird:
1) Birds are typically not family animals. They usually choose a favorite and at best you can expect them to tolerate everyone else.
2) Birds are not great with kids, dogs, other birds, and are not cuddly with everyone, nor can they really be trained to be. Birds are flock animals, who are social creatures that need to be in a communal area where they can see the rest of the family, or you may eperience serious vocalization and behavior problems. We’ve never met a bird who is great with kids, but we have met kids who are respectful of birds.
3) Birds bite. But, you shouldn’t “take the bite”. If you’re getting bit, you haven’t earned the trust of the bird, and are pushing the bird past his/her limits. You must figure out what the bird needs, and make what you’re asking of the bird more attractive than what they are already doing.
4) Birds are not “dominance” based creatures. Your only option for birds is to earn their trust. If they are, say…on top of a cage and don’t want to come down, that is where they feel safest, not a dominance thing. They are not trying to exert dominance, they just don’t want to come down. Your job as a parrot owner is to figure out what you can do to help them trust you, and whatever you are asking to be more attractive than what they are already doing.
5) NEVER send money over the internet for adoption with any individual or organization for the adoption of an animal you have not met in person. That is almost always a scam.
Videos of Pickles & Mr. Belvedere
The videos on Facebook, TikTok and Instagram are the same, just choose your favorite social network to watch them on.