🎲 Toys & Enrichment – Keeping Your Parrot Happy and Stimulated
🧠 1. Why Enrichment is Important
Prevents boredom and destructive behavior.
Encourages natural instincts like foraging, chewing, and problem-solving.
Strengthens your bond through interactive play.
Keeps your parrot physically active and mentally sharp.
🪵 2. Types of Toys
Foraging Toys 🥜
Hide treats inside paper cups, cardboard tubes, or store-bought puzzle feeders.
Encourages natural food-hunting instincts.
Chew Toys 🪚
Made from bird-safe wood, vegetable-tanned leather, or palm leaves.
Satisfies chewing urges and keeps beak healthy.
Interactive Toys 🤹
Bells, foot toys, or hanging ropes for climbing and swinging.
Encourages physical exercise and playfulness.
Training Toys 🎯
Target sticks, rings to fetch, or shape-sorting toys to build intelligence.
🔄 3. Toy Rotation
Rotate toys weekly to keep them fresh and exciting.
Mix new toys with familiar favorites so your parrot feels safe but curious.
🏠 4. DIY Enrichment Ideas
Cardboard boxes to shred.
Ice cube trays with hidden seeds inside paper.
Natural branches (safe wood types like apple, willow, or manzanita).
⚠️ 5. Safety Tips
Avoid toys with small loose parts that can be swallowed.
Remove any frayed rope or broken plastic pieces immediately.
Use bird-safe materials only — avoid zinc, lead, or treated wood.
🎯 Pro Tip:
Turn training sessions into enrichment by mixing learning with play.
For example, hide a treat under cups and let your parrot “find” the right one.
