African Grey beak issues

Jean Whitacre

New member
Nov 3, 2023
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Parrots
African Grey
Hello all! I am brand new to this site…. I have a 25 y/o Timneh that is having beak issues. I brought him to an avian vet and had his beak trimmed, then brought him back 6 months later to have it trimmed again. Now he is struggling to eat peanuts and other hard food. What can I do to make sure he doesn’t get sick?
 
Hi there! Out of curiosity, what has motivated you to ask for beak trims? Is there a case of scissorbeak preventing him from grinding his own beak down? If his beak is aligned correctly, regular destruction of toys should be enough to keep it from overgrowing to the extent that a vet would need to intervene. Even with scissorbeak, a vet might be able to carefully grind the beak back into alignment so that the bird can grind their own beak with toys moving forward. Either way, my point is that beak trims are by no means just a regular maintenance requirement of owning parrots, it's unusual you've had to do it multiple times.

If his beak is aligned OK then basically your biggest job is making sure he has destructible toys.

That said if he has alignment issues OR refuses to play with toys making trims necessary, you should really make sure that whatever vet you take him to doesn't clip/cut his beak, and instead it should be ground down with a dremel. If he's uninterested in food it's possible that they cracked the keratin in his beak in a way that's painful.
 
I have been keeping parrots since 1984
Only had one bird that needed a beak trim.
Normal wear and tear should be enough to keep it the proper size.

Sometimes diet can cause abnormal beak growth.
At least I think I read that somewhere.
Be sure your African Grey is getting adequate calcium.
For some reason grey’s tend to run towards calcium deficiency but Check with your Avian Certified Vet.
 

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