Even birds with clipped wings can and will fly when spooked. Therefore, unless you have a disabled bird, you should be prepared for your bird escaping. Even the most vigilant and careful caregivers should know how to recover an escaped parrot...just in case.

If your bird is stolen you should contact In http://www.idausa.org/search.html Defense of Animals' Stolen Pet hotline: (800) STOLENPET

Finding an Escaped Bird

How to Proceed

Act Immediately - Locating your bird is the first step. It is critical that this be done as quickly as possible. So, start searching as soon as you realize your bird is lost. Place his/her Cage Outside - Put the cage outside and fill it with his/her favorite treats and fresh water. Leave the cage door open. Canvas the Neighborhood - Most birds are recovered within a half mile of the escape location, so within hours you need to have everyone within that area know how to contact you. Let your neighbors know that you lost your bird. Walk around the neighborhood and call his/her name. The best way to do this it to literally go door to door to every home within a half a mile of the escape location. Disburse Fliers - Post and pass out fliers with a detailed description of your bird and a picture if you have one. Include instructions that say to leave the bird alone and not attempt to recover it and your contact phone. Ensure that as many eyes and ears as possible are on the lookout - Give fliers to school crossing guards and distribute them to students exiting schools local to the escape location. Keep Your Phone Charged - The phone number listed on the flier should be a fully charged cell phone with service available in the area of loss. If this is not available the phone should be a friend or family member who will be able to contact you while you are out searching. Offer a Reward - Offer a reward for the safe return of your lost bird.

What to Expect

Even brightly colored parrots blend in amazingly well and are hard to spot. The bird will most likely start calling within the first 24 hours; those close should know how to contact you.

Days are not counted with 24 hours, but how many nights the parrot has been out.

Day 1 is the day of escape whether morning or late in the afternoon.

Day 2 is the day after the first night spent out.

Day 3 is the day after the 2nd night out.

First 24 hours

Looking for parrots should begin the moment they escape and continue until dusk and resume every morning at dawn. Large parrots are quiet and roost at night making searching at night fairly pointless.

Next 24 Hours

If you have not spotted your parrot within the first 24 hours make sure someone does rounds at local shelters and veterinary hospitals on a daily basis. As time passes the chances of recovery lessens so move fast and keep moving.

Send your flier to your local avian vet.

Call your local animal care and control and humane society and list your bird missing; Go there every day to see if your bird has been surrendered.

Day Three

By day 3 you should enlarge your flier area to 1 mile and grow it each day thereafter. This is the most critical part of recovery. DON'T GIVE UP TOO SOON!

Place an ad in your local newspapers. Some of them place ads about lost and found animals for free. Seek a bird rescue organization near you and let them know you lost your bird. They often take in stray birds as well. List your bird as missing at other lost and found bird websites: www.birdhotline.com

www.batnet.com/candiceb

www.lostandfound.com

www.pets.lostandfound.com

911 Parrot Alert

Recovering a Large Parrot

Birds instinctively tend to fly when their adrenalin level is high. They also generally fly up to the highest point they can land. However, most pet birds today have never fully fledged (fledging is the process of learning how to fly). While smaller birds can often fly quite easily, larger parrots require more skill to be able to take off and land at will, and navigate where they want to go.

Wait Until the Bird is Ready to Come Down

Consequently, if a bird flies to something high, like a tree, it may not have the skill and experience to know how to fly down. This means that most large parrots who escape their caregivers need to be found quickly and then monitored until they are ready to climb down on their own. Once the parrot is located, if it is above arms reach, you need to wait until the parrot climbs down willingly. The parrot will do this on its timetable, not yours. Food treats and attention by the caregiver are the only tools that should be used to encourage the parrot to come down sooner, rather then later.

Do NOT Spook the Bird into Taking Off Again

Chances are, the parrot will not come down until s/he has spent two nights out. Thus, your goal is to ensure that nothing spooks the parrot into flight. The worst thing that can happen is for the parrot to take flight again so you have to resume your search. This means that under no circumstances should anyone climb a tree, use a ladder, net, pole, hose, or other reaching item to access the parrot. A few cold nights are far less dangerous to the bird than having it fly onto a power line or to a location where you can't spot it. The hard part is finding a bird!

Observe the Bird

The parrot should be observed from dawn to dusk. The parrot will probably just roost. Food should not be left out or distributed around location. The goal is for the parrot to climb down to the caregiver. This usually happens on day three. Avoid too many strangers at the location. You want the parrot to focus on its caregiver.

Watch for signs the parrots is ready to climb down:

Fluttering of wings

Movement in tree to ensure a good view of care giver

Calls to care giver when not in view

Movement toward the caregiver

Start the Food Fest

Once the parrot is showing clear signs of being ready to climb down, start passing favorite foods to other spotters around the location in view of parrot. Make yummy sounds showing great pleasure in having such wonderful treats. Use fairly large visible portions of brightly or strong smelling foods that the parrot sees as a treat. This should get the parrot fairly excited if it is ready to come down. Continue with the food fest with only the primary caregiver directly at the base where the parrot will need to climb down.

Leave and Return

If the parrot settles a bit during day three, leave a spotter at the location and have the primary caregiver leave for an hour or so, returning with a plate of food. Offer the food to the spotter and start the food fest over again. Most likely, by the end of day three, the parrot will give in and climb down to its care giver.

If it is getting late in the day on day 3 and the parrot is looking like it is settling in for the night, call the pizza delivery guy for one last shot for that day.

By day 4 most parrots will climb down to anyone, but for those few holdouts, just continue as on previous days. The parrot will eventually climb down when it is ready.

Be Prepared for an Escape

For all pet owners, please have fliers ready just in case. Take 30 minutes now to make one up for each pet. Have copies available so a friend can make copies for you while you do an initial search.

You don't want to take this time after the escape nor do you want to find you have no photo. A photo should show the bird in full color both back and front view and with wings spread if possible. If you leave town and your parrots in the care of others, make sure they fully understand the recovery process and that they understand to notify you immediately if you bird escapes.

