Aussie Ben
New member
So I was doing a bigger than usual cage clean today (thought it was time). While I was at it thought I might share a few things that I do to keep the cage and surrounding in good condition. Feel free to add some if you have any, you never know who it might help.
TIP:
Cleaning āusedā natural perches. This is great for those of you that have limited access to ābird safeā natural wood and want to preserve the perches you findā¦
Does your bird have a natural perch that it loves to poop on and rub its dirty beak on? I find it annoying to throw out these branches, especially when they are the perfect shape/size. I do find it hard to keep them clean, because you cannot wipe them down like metal or plastic surfaces. Well, you could sand them, but that takes forever.
My tip is to get yourself a nice extendable blade (a strong one) and scrape the branch and peel it like a potato. This method works so well, especially with softer woods like Eucalyptus, but it can work with anything. It really is so simple to do and goes like a hot knife through butter. After you have scrapped everything off, give it a quick sand with rough paper to get rid of any splinters. Finally get a damp rag to wipe off the dust. Now your bird can enjoy his favourite branch for much longerā¦ well until he gets bored with it
Checkout the before and afters below, good as knew if not better. Clean up is as easy as a quick sweep. You can do this as many times as you want, until the branch is too thin. PLEASE BE CAREFUL, never cut towards yourself and keep fingers out of the blades path!
TIP:
Cleaning āusedā natural perches. This is great for those of you that have limited access to ābird safeā natural wood and want to preserve the perches you findā¦
Does your bird have a natural perch that it loves to poop on and rub its dirty beak on? I find it annoying to throw out these branches, especially when they are the perfect shape/size. I do find it hard to keep them clean, because you cannot wipe them down like metal or plastic surfaces. Well, you could sand them, but that takes forever.
My tip is to get yourself a nice extendable blade (a strong one) and scrape the branch and peel it like a potato. This method works so well, especially with softer woods like Eucalyptus, but it can work with anything. It really is so simple to do and goes like a hot knife through butter. After you have scrapped everything off, give it a quick sand with rough paper to get rid of any splinters. Finally get a damp rag to wipe off the dust. Now your bird can enjoy his favourite branch for much longerā¦ well until he gets bored with it
Checkout the before and afters below, good as knew if not better. Clean up is as easy as a quick sweep. You can do this as many times as you want, until the branch is too thin. PLEASE BE CAREFUL, never cut towards yourself and keep fingers out of the blades path!