All Parrots

Education, training, rescue, conservation, love, and care of parrots.



All Parrots Videos

Subscribe to All Parrots on YouTube

Previous Video     Return to Search Results     Next Video

Overgrown Beak on Parrot or Macaw?

Published on November 12, 2024

What happens if a beak is overgrown on a macaw? An overgrown beak can make it difficult to eat, chew, preen, and play. Worse yet, an excessively overgrown upper beak can poke into the body. An overgrown lower beak can make it difficult to eat, drink, or shut the beak.

Normally, the beak on a parrot breaks down on its own from active chewing. Cracking nuts or playing with toys usually trims the beak down on its own. However, some pet parrots are inactive and do not chew enough to trim the beak on its own. What should you do if your parrot doesn't chew enough for the beak to stay the appropriate length?

First, try to encourage more active play with toys. More wood toys at the difficulty level that keeps your parrot engaged and chewing (even if they have to be very thin). Foraging toys like the Natural Foraging Box may help entice chewing:
https://ParrotWizard.com/Foraging_Box

If no amount of toys is helping, you may be able to file down some of the excess length on the upper beak on your own using a nail trimmer stone:
https://ParrotWizard.com/Nail_Trimmer

However, if the lower beak is too long or you can't get the upper beak to shorten, you may need the service of an avian veterinarian. Whatever you do, do not try to cut the beak yourself because there are nerve ending and it can bleed.

Previous Video     Return to Search Results     Next Video



Share my passion for all parrots! Watch my extensive archive of free parrot training videos. Subscribe to All Parrots on YouTube so you don't miss a new release. Watch Michael Sazhin, the Parrot Wizard, training parrots to step up, come out of cage, go back into cage, flight recall, put on a bird harness, flip upside, do tricks, and become all around great pets! Videos include parrots such as Cockatiel, Indian Ringneck, Sun Conure, Green Cheek Conure, Senegal Parrot, Cape Parrot, Galah (Rose Breasted Cockatoo), Palm Cockatoo, Timneh African Grey, Congo African Grey, Scarlet Macaw, Blue and Gold Macaw, Green-Winged Macaw, and Hyacinth Macaw. Future release videos may feature other parrot species such as Parrotlet, Lovebird, Budgie, Blue Crowned Conure, White Bellied Caique, Black Headed Caique, Meyer's Parrot, Jardine's Parrot, Blue Headed Pionus, Orange Winged Amazon, Yellow Naped Amazon, Umbrella Cockatoo, Sulphur Crested Cockatoo, Military Macaw, Illeger's Macaw, Hahn's Macaw, and Eclectus. Thank you for visiting AllParrots.com