PET TALES
Pet remembered for love of flying
Meet my new friend.
He's bright green with
a splotch of crimson on
his head. Oh, and did I
forget the fella has a sleek
tail?
If you guessed a colorful character from
Saturday Night Live - well you got one
part right.
I met this little guy last weekend at the
Charlotte County Animal Shelter in Port
Charlotte. Someone had found the feathery
pal in their backyard and had turned it into
the shelter.
For a few minutes the parrot and I eyed
each other with curiosity. A moment later
after I apparently checked out OK, the
hook billed critter began playing with his
toys that were tethered in his large cage.
He captivated me with his acrobatics
and mischief as he lunged at a wooden
donut. But that's parrots for you.
Many of the tropical birds can talk and
even carry on a lively conversation - hey
it's more than we can sometimes say about
some of the human species.
It's because of these enchanting ways I
cannot forget my first pet bird. It's been
more than 20 years, and still the memory of
Perky, a feisty little parrot, has not faded.
Perky died suddenly on an otherwise
sunny April 3 in the mid-1980s after he flew
into a mirror and hemorrhaged.
But that is not how this bold bird-spirit
would want to be remembered.
Perky was a Halfmoon Conure, or for
the less than parrot savvy, a dwarf parrot. He was given to me and my siblings as a
holiday present when we were kids, a gift
that would long surpass the Atari game
system and other funky toys we got while
growing up.
We could watch Perky for hours and
never tire. His outrageous antics and love
of flying endeared us. I used to marvel
at how this bright green, pint-sized bird
would strut around his playpen, climbing
rows of little wooden ladders effortlessly.
But our favorite thing about Perky was
his devotion to being free. We would watch
in awe as this tiny green being would step
into form and just slip into the air. This
was Perky's consummate love - a love
that surpassed his favorite treats and even
getting scratched on his head - a love that
would ultimately take his life.
Unfortunately, my siblings and I encouraged
Perky's love affair with taking to wing,
against our parents wishes. We would hold
out our arms and act like mobile landing
pads for our intrepid flyer.
We took great joy in watching him
swoop and soar, feats that in our young
minds we knew we would never be able
to do. So we lived though Perky's jaunts
through the house.
And he was a bird watcher too.
Perky's favorite place to hang out was
atop a high curtain rod in the family room.
He would perch there for hours watching
the wild and totally free birds outside
glide along the sky. Sometimes other birds
would fly over to the window and look at
him, which would always freak out our
domesticated little guy.
On several occasions Perky would take
his flying liberties a bit too far for my dad's taste. My father would find him sitting on
top of the curtain rod and tell him it was
time to go into his cage. My dad would
approach Perky with his finger extended
to let him perch. But instead of jumping
aboard the finger express, Perky would
get a glint of mischief in his little parrot
eyes and take off. My father, getting visibly
miffed, would walk over to wherever
Perky landed and try to collect him. But
once again Perky would zoom off in another
direction.
Then my father would give him the look
- the same look he would give us when
we pushed things too far. Now Perky knew
he was in the soup and would gingerly hop
on top of my Dad's hand.
But all of these shenanigans came to an
abrupt end when Perky one day flew into
a bathroom mirror. To this day we don't
know why he took that tragic flight. But we
surmise he thought he saw one of his own
feathered friends and wanted to say hello.
So a day after his clash with the mirror
we found him bleeding and huddled up, a
ball of soft green feathers on the bottom
of his cage. It was too late to get him any
medical help. My dad, who worked 50
miles away, raced home but by the time he
got there all he could do was hold us.
We had lost our beloved Perky.
Oddly enough, Perky's favorite song was
"Fame." He used to bob and sing every
time it went on the radio. The lyrics said
in part, "I'm going to live forever... Baby
remember my name."
And though he is buried in our old childhood
backyard, beneath the very window
he used to love to perch above - his spirit
has moved on with all of us.