Medium Birds Cages

Medium Birds Cages

Medium birds are beautiful and smart birds. Buying a cage for your bird should be done with thought and the knowledge that your bird will grow and be with you for up to eighty years.

Purchasing a Medium bird as a house pet, the cages you choose for that bird is just as important as any other aspect of care. African grey breed is smaller than most parrots. They need more space to move around. Even if they are alone in the cage overnight or when you are not at home, they need freedom of flexibility, and they need plenty of space to move and play around the cages that you buy for them.

Buying a cage is not a one size fits all purchase; with cages we recommend the bigger the cage you can find, the better. A size of at least 2 feet wide and 3 feet long is advisable; but, if you have a place, and can afford it, a larger size would be a better option for you to choose when trying to find the best cage for the parrot.

Choosing the cages to place the parrot in, you must look for the ideal spot in the home as well. Placing the cage in a location where there is interaction with people, but not too traffic area in the house. You also avoid places where too much sunlight comes into the home, to prevent overheating. The parrot needs to be seen and heard, but not too much traffic.

Albeit Medium fowl appear to be little contrasted; while parrots are exceptionally enormous creatures when compared. They need a lot of room inside their fledgling pen to move around and remain dynamic. An excellent choice to find a birdcage that is 36” wide, 24” deep, and 40” high (or larger). Remember, if space is limited, a minimum cage size of 34” wide, 24” deep, and 36” tall would also work. In the wild Amazon’s are nesters, so they are generally disposed to bite on wood.

 

Cage Styles

There are different styles of cages such as Open top, Play Top, Solid top.

Open top cages:

These have tops that open (plainly), offering holders to which you can add a roost. This enables the parrot a high vantage concentrates similarly as the ability to return the walled-in area for food and water fluctuating. This style of cage might be an inconvenience for apprentice owners who can't get a Parrot to deliberately leave the high perch so owners can close the fenced-in area for the night.

 

Play Top cages:

Like the open top pens, these are standard when there is a bad situation for a Parrot to spread out, and for individual feathered animals, they work outstandingly. Regardless, if owners have not suitably arranged their Parrots, moving them away from a play top pen can be a test. Some play top walled in areas grants you to kill the play top to put elsewhere while Parrots are indicated better propensities, to be returned to the central position once real planning is set up.

 

Solid top cages:

Concrete top enclosures can be either level or adjusted ("vault top"). This style of a section doesn't open, nor does it have a play zone connected. The arch top confines can introduce a preliminary for short (a.k.a. "stature tested") proprietors attempting to arrive at winged animals that hang out in the arch.

Also, essential to the medium birds are bird toys and activities. Make sure you select a birdcage that has enough room to add different toys, activities, and perches because they socialize with their owners. Also, consider a birdcage that provides multiple places outside the cage to perch.

Purchasing toys appropriate for your medium cage is crucial. You want the parrot to stay busy, so having toys in the cage, and rotating them with other toys so very often, is something to consider so your parrot does not get bored. Also remember that when you are not home, all they have are these toys, and other items in the cages, so you want to find things that will keep them busy, and you want to choose a cage that gives them room for freedom of flexibility to fly around in as well.

Some features to consider:

-All parrots are creative and will find ways to open doors and get out of their cage. Look for entry doors and feeder doors that have locking mechanisms to prevent an accidental escape.

-Slide-out trays and grids are easier to clean than concrete cage floors.

-Some cages come equipped with seed guards around the base of the cell, which helps keep the mess inside of the cage.

 



© 2023 Scarletts Parrot Essentials. All Rights Reserved. VAT. Registration No. 106 2787 19