Bird-Proofing Your Home Room by Room
Safety First
Out-of-cage time is essential for your bird's physical and mental health. But a typical home is full of hidden dangers for a curious bird.
Kitchen
The most dangerous room. Non-stick cookware (Teflon, PTFE) releases fumes that are instantly lethal to birds when overheated. Self-cleaning ovens produce the same fumes. Hot stovetops, open pots, and sharp utensils are additional risks. Keep your bird out of the kitchen when cooking.
Living Room
Cover or remove large mirrors and windows — birds cannot see glass and may fly into them at full speed, causing fatal injuries. Secure electrical cords, remove toxic houseplants, and check for small objects that could be swallowed.
Bathroom
Open toilet lids, standing water, cleaning chemicals, and hot curling irons are all dangers. Keep the bathroom door closed unless your bird is supervised.
Bedroom
Check for small spaces where a bird could get trapped: behind furniture, inside closets, under bed covers. Never sleep with your bird — the risk of rolling onto them is real.
General Hazards
Ceiling fans (turn them off during free flight), candles and incense (fumes are toxic), air fresheners and aerosols, other pets (especially cats and dogs), and open doors and windows.
Toxic Plants
Common houseplants that are toxic to birds include philodendrons, pothos, ivy, dieffenbachia, and lilies. Safe alternatives include spider plants, Boston ferns, and African violets.
The Checklist
Before every free flight session, do a quick scan: windows closed, ceiling fan off, other pets secured, kitchen off-limits, toilet lids down. It takes 30 seconds and could save a life.
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