Goldenbaby
New member
I just have a simple question.. What do you do once your cockatoo has learned to unlock and open their cage on their own? What second means do you use to secure the cage door?? My little goffin is quite smart LOL.
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I used a bungee cord for a while with a macaw. It worked for about a week.
Then I used those plastic computer tie straps (or cord straps) but then you have to keep scissors close by so that you can cut him out of the cage. Can you send a picture of what kind of lock he has picked? There are different locks on the market that you can put on the cage after market.
I don't have a picture of this but the cage I had my Too in - the previous owner had to place plastic clips above and below the latch so that the too couldn't get his foot and beak to the latch. The clips were like those that hold plastic foods dishes on the cage. I don't know if you could do something like that or not. My too wanted out of the cage...my macaw didn't try. He was smart enough but he just didn't try.
I don't have a picture of this but the cage I had my Too in - the previous owner had to place plastic clips above and below the latch so that the too couldn't get his foot and beak to the latch. The clips were like those that hold plastic foods dishes on the cage. I don't know if you could do something like that or not. My too wanted out of the cage...my macaw didn't try. He was smart enough but he just didn't try.
My dads goffin has to have all openings of his cage padlocked shut (door, dish doors, bottom grate). Cage size-wise, as big as you can fit is good, cockatoos need as much room as possible because they are so active! I think my dad's is in a macaw size cage. Just be sure you get a cage that screws together or is a solid piece. Alfie had a cage once that kind of "snapped" together and he managed to pry the top up, escape, and ransack the house so bad my dad thought he'd been burgled when he got home. Sneaky, devious little birds those goffins are!
Edit: They are a lot more expensive, but you MUST get stainless steel padlocks. The regular kind could contain zinc which is fatally toxic to parrots. It is 100% worth it to invest in stainless (which is non-toxic to parrots)!
I 100% agree!!! Goffins are very much the nosy devious birds! But I have had him now for almost 2 years and I just love him. He def has his TOO moments.
I 100% agree!!! Goffins are very much the nosy devious birds! But I have had him now for almost 2 years and I just love him. He def has his TOO moments.
Wait till you've had him 40 years like my dad has Alfie They'll have been more than one time you pondered how BBQ cockatoo tasted
I have 5 Goffins, and several of them are extremely adept of escapism.
Cages equipped with the mechanism that flip 180 degrees before sliding unlocked are easy to defeat, though locking the flip-handle with a C-clamp is helpful. Others cages with a spring-type latch are picked apart and are now jury rigged shut when needed. My first brainstorm was to slide a 3" bolt through the now vacant mechanism secured with a bolt. My oldest Goffin learned to unthread the bolt by rotating it dozens of times with his tongue! I now use a 6" section of thin but flexible wire that is bent into a "U" shape passed through the slot; so far that is impenetrable.
In the days prior to securing the flip-lock with a C-clamp, the Goffins enjoying free time would often unlatch a seed-dish compartment, thus allowing the Goffin inside the cage to push the dish through the opening and escape!
Goffins are perpetual motion machines that have outsized personalities and are my favorite parrot. I am fortunate none of them are particularly neurotic, and all can be left outside the cage for hours without supervision.
do not turn the channel if sports is on. Throws a Fit!!! LOL.