Kiwibird
Well-known member
- Jul 12, 2012
- 9,539
- 111
- Parrots
- 1 BFA- Kiwi. Hatch circa 98', forever home with us Dec. 08'
I am making Kiwi a new t-perch at my husbands insistence (who hates Kiwi's swing-style perch). He hasn't had one in a few years but I remember both t-perches he had prior to this, the top of the "T" always spun after a while and I could never figure out a bird-safe solution to stop it. This was also the case with t-perches my mom made her birds. In fact the female amazon thinks it's great fun to sit on one end of her perch while flapping as hard as she can so she spins in a circle like she's on a birdie carnival ride
Curious if it might be ok to run a little Elmers school glue (the "non-toxic" stuff) in the screw hole and underside where the "T" meets. I know wood glue would be more ideal but I don't believe they make any kind of "non-toxic" wood glues. Obviously, I would be very neat with application and keep any glue residue well out of reach. I'm assuming it would probably be ok since he wouldn't really be able to get to it and doesn't chew up perches and I'd be using a glue safe for use by children. Any thoughts about the safety of doing that or alternative ideas to keep it from spinning? Thanks.
P.S. Yes I know to only use stainless hardware for assembly
Curious if it might be ok to run a little Elmers school glue (the "non-toxic" stuff) in the screw hole and underside where the "T" meets. I know wood glue would be more ideal but I don't believe they make any kind of "non-toxic" wood glues. Obviously, I would be very neat with application and keep any glue residue well out of reach. I'm assuming it would probably be ok since he wouldn't really be able to get to it and doesn't chew up perches and I'd be using a glue safe for use by children. Any thoughts about the safety of doing that or alternative ideas to keep it from spinning? Thanks.
P.S. Yes I know to only use stainless hardware for assembly