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Medium parrots are the great connectors of the bird world. They are not so tiny that they need constant reassurance, nor so large that they intimidate. Instead, they live right in the middle — and that middle is where the magic happens.
If you have ever been owned by a conure, you know what I mean. One moment they are a clown, hanging upside down from a toy, tongue flicking in and out as they laugh at their own joke. The next moment, they are a velcro bird, pressed against your neck, refusing to let anyone else touch you. Medium birds feel everything deeply. They get jealous. They get excited. They get bored in two seconds flat.
That is why our philosophy for medium birds is simple: Respect the drama, but honor the depth.
These birds need toys that match their energy. A Quaker parrot will dismantle a puzzle in under a minute — not out of aggression, but out of pure, joyful curiosity. A caique will bunny-hop across the table, grab a foraging toy, and toss it to you as if saying, “Your turn.” They want interaction. They want to be seen.
And yet, medium birds are also prone to emotional struggles more than most people realize. Feather destructive behavior often starts not from physical illness, but from loneliness or lack of mental engagement. A conure left alone all day with nothing to do may develop habits that break both its feathers and your heart. That is not a bad bird. That is a bird asking for connection.
So we design toys that become bridges between you and your parrot. Foraging wheels that hide sunflower seeds. Shreddable finger traps threaded onto cotton ropes. Swings that rock gently when they land — because even a confident conure needs to know the ground is steady when they close their eyes to sleep.
We also think about their beaks. Medium parrots have beaks that can crack a small nut but also nibble your earlobe with surprising tenderness. They need toys that offer variety: soft balsa wood for tearing, harder pine for gnawing, and natural materials like coconut husk or seagrass for shredding. A medium bird’s jaw muscles need exercise, but so does their sense of touch. Texture matters. Resistance matters. Safety matters most.
But beyond the materials, beyond the colors, beyond the “parrot-safe” certifications — we think about their soul. What does a medium parrot dream about? We think they dream of you. Of that moment you walk through the door and they scream a happy greeting. Of the shared apple slice. Of the game where you hide a treat and they have to figure out which cup it’s under.
When you love a medium bird, you learn that love is not quiet. It is loud, messy, demanding — and absolutely beautiful. They will wake you up at dawn. They will chew your favorite book’s spine. They will steal your heart before you even realize it’s gone.
And you wouldn’t trade a single feather of it.