There's a book I'm sending with my Senegal to The Gabriel Foundation:
Guide to the Senegal Parrot and Its Family. I haven't read the whole thing because it's breaking my heart to give up an eleven-year-old bird I raised from the egg. I'm having a very hard time dealing with this decision, even though I think it's the best thing for Darla.
I read enough of the book to confirm that the author knows exactly what she's talking about when it comes to
Poicephalus parrots. Senegals are the most readily available
Poicephalus parrot and make excellent little pets. Meyer's are next in availability, but there are also red-bellies, brown-heads, Ruppell's, Capes and Jardine's. The larger Jardine's get rave reviews. Capes and Ruppell's are rare in aviculture and aren't usually offered as pets.
Meyer's have the most steady personalities, while red-bellies make the best talkers. Of course, my little female Senegal talks quite a bit and would have learned more had I put more effort into it.
Darla's personality reminds me a bit of the personality of an African grey.
Poicephalus and
Psittacus erithacus are cousins. In fact, Cape parrots and African greys have successfully hybridized.
The sensitivity of Senegal parrots reminds me of the larger grey. Also, I have the distinct impression that Darla is actually smarter than my big green Amazon! She has a larger vocabulary, can escape any cage I've ever put her in and will even mimic body language. On the minus side, she developed the African grey curse: feather plucking. :( This is a very difficult problem to deal with, but doesn't seem to affect
Poicephalus nearly as often as African greys. Still, I have known a few Senegals that developed the problem.
Poicephalus are extremely acrobatic. My Senegal has an exercise wheel in her cage that she swings on. Sometimes she'll make it go all the way around with her inside, shouting, "Wheeeeee, bird!!!" She can climb anything. If you get a
Poicephalus, it will need a lot of things to climb on. Also, they require lots of easily-destroyed toys. You can buy all kinds of wooden "foot toys" at reasonable prices. Darla loves destroying different kinds of cactus toys made for birds.
Also, Senegals tend to be very, very jealous. My Senegal is jealous of my Amazon, my snakes and any inanimate objects I spend time with, including the telephone and the computer. She will bite me and the offending animals / objects when she is pissed. She has been known to terrorize my Amazon parrot by biting his toes (he doesn't defend himself) and once tried to kill my milksnake, Bayou, who was, thankfully, safely esconced in his cage.
One thing noted by Mattie Sue Athan is that Senegals tend to be fearless when it comes to their people and other pets, but an unknown inanimate object can send them flying across the room. I'd like to know more about this "split personality" trait and wanted to read on, but I just couldn't emotionally handle reading about an animal I'm going to give up for adoption. :cry:
Each species has its own profile and each individual has its own personality. And remember, these little guys are very sensitive. They need just the right kind of attention to keep from developing behavioral problems. I think my being ill so often led to some of Darla's current problems. I'm looking ahead, trying to find her a more stimulating environment.