


At each page, scan the page for a coupon code or promotion code option. Confirm that you are buying what you want, and that it fulfills any requirements to qualify for the My Safe Bird Store promotion code you want to use. If you have any questions about using your coupons online, please contact Customer Service. These coupons allow people to make the right choices and save big every time.īelow is the Easy 3 Step process to get your savings now! Apply your code and check whether your discount was reflected and continue your checkout. If the rope is beginning to fray, I watch it and remove it when I judge it's getting unsafe.People can find numerous options online to consider and shop at My Safe Bird Store, using online coupon codes and discounts. Hemp and sisal are coarser and stiffer and far less likely to 'fluff' as cotton does (although a swing I recently made for 'Setta has turned into a bad wig, owing to her tender preening of the cut ends of the rope). I'd say steer clear of cotton rope because it quickly erodes to become a thick, cottony mess and doubtless contains microfibres that could easily compound in a bird's gullet or crop to form a thick, indigestible lump.

They go through tonnes of fibre and tough woody stuff every day, yet they''re healthy and happy and keep doing it, so it can't be all that bad for them. The wild cockies will descend on the trees in a street and strip them bare, then move on, leaving a thick carpet of broken branches and general frass for the householders to clean up.
MYSAFE PARROT CRACK
I get to watch the wild flocks stripping trees all the time and I promise you, they ingest an awful lot of fibrous stuff you wouldn't want to be feeding them! They crack open pine cones and will nom up piles of casuarina nuts which contain lots of woody, nutty bits (just like almond shell). Australian cockies get to shred tea-trees and bottlebrushes and those are seriously fibrous, as are the bloodwoods (a kind of gum tree with stringy bark that pulls off in long fibrous strips) and ironbarks (another gum tree with plaques of ironlike bark). Imagine a cockatoo in the wild, shredding bark off trees to pull out insect larvae and get to the fresh shoots growing underneath. I mean, if you think about it that way (my worries above), really nothing is safe, but birds need to chew.So am hoping that in small enough amounts, certain fibers will eventually breakdown internally without producing blockages. I am afraid that if she accidentally ingests enough little particles of junk that she will end up with a blockage years later.Ĭurrently, she is shredding a sea-grass foraging wall and she has made piles of seagrass everywhere.I can tell she isn't eating it, but it just seems impossible to spit out all of the tiny little fibers, even though I'm pretty sure she does her best.I think about myself eating sunflower seeds in the hull lol.Even if I try to spit it out, inevitably, some fibers get swallowed.then again, she is a parrot and I'm not, so maybe I'm over-thinking it? I know that ropes can be a lot of fun for them and I need something to make her toys etc (she prefers rope to stainless when it comes to hanging wood)-That having been said, she likes to chew/mouth things (like leather, her feathers, my hair etc) and although she always spits it out, I am not sure that I trust her :Ī few months ago, I gave he an almond in the shell, and she ate a few tiny bits of it (the shell)! Ever since, I have been worried that she might do the same with non-food items or other non-digestible materials when I am not around to notice. That's where I'm torn-I need something safe, but something that is either too tough for her to chew on or something digestible.and I am not sure it exists.
