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Bird guides
Bare-eyed Cockatoos Care Guide
Bare-eyed Cockatoos are smart, clownish corellas with dust, volume, chewing, and a need for owners who enjoy training as much as affection.
Bare-eyeds fit experienced homes that want an active, funny cockatoo and can provide structure, enrichment, air management, and realistic noise tolerance.

Noise level
Very loud calls are normal, especially when the routine, sleep, or attention is off.
Daily social time
Cockatoos need a lot of connection, but too much clingy attention can create harder behavior later.
Handling style
Plan for observation-first or practical handling; do not choose this bird for cuddling.
Space needs
Large housing and dust-aware placement are part of normal care.
Diet complexity
Treat control matters. Many cockatoos need measured meals and weight checks.
Mess level
Dust, food waste, and toy debris need air-aware cleaning.
Enrichment needs
Needs enrichment that builds independence; nonstop cuddling is not a healthy plan.
Setup cost
Budget for large housing, dust-aware cleaning, chew replacements, and specialist care.
First-time fit
Better for prepared homes that can support flight space, independent behavior, and species-specific care.
Great fit for
- Bare-eyeds fit experienced homes that want an active, funny cockatoo and can provide structure, enrichment, air management, and realistic noise tolerance.
- Because sound varies by species and individual, hear the exact bird before adoption and make sure its calls, activity, space, and care routine fit the home.
- Plan for a very large setup, safe placement, and a cleaning routine you can repeat on ordinary weeks.
Think twice if
- The home cannot tolerate powerful calls, expensive gear, destructive chewing, daily training, and decades of care.
- The routine would likely rely on snacks and handling pressure instead of training, enrichment, balanced food, and mood awareness.
- The household expects instant cuddles instead of patient, choice-based trust.
A workable day with Bare-eyed Cockatoos
Plan each day with bare-eyed cockatoos around food prep, cage cleanup, safe movement, enrichment, and a calm read of the bird's mood. Keep the social plan realistic: deep commitment, enrichment, clear daily rules, and experienced handling. If that routine feels hard to repeat during a normal busy week, pause before adopting bare-eyed cockatoos.
What people underestimate about Bare-eyed Cockatoos
The surprise with bare-eyed cockatoos is mischief. A bare-eyed cockatoo can be hilarious, but the same curiosity can become screaming, dismantling, or pestering without a plan.
Housing that works for Bare-eyed Cockatoos
Use secure housing, strong latches, chew work, foraging, bathing, and easy cleaning for dust and debris.
Food routine for Bare-eyed Cockatoos
Pellets, vegetables, greens, limited fruit, and careful weight control. Keep fresh water, measured portions, and slow changes so appetite, droppings, and weight are easy to read.
Living with the voice and sleep rhythm
Typical sound: Very loud calls, powder down in many species, and intense social behavior are normal. Many birds are most active in the morning and evening. If those normal sounds would be a problem, decide that before adoption; do not count on training the voice away.
Trust, company, and handling
Train daily life skills: station, step-up, step-down, carrier, and calm independent play. Comedy is easier to enjoy when the bird has rules.
Cleaning without compromising the air
Dust, shredded toys, food waste, and feather debris need a cleaning plan that protects air quality without scented products. Keep the air around the bird simple: no smoke, aerosols, candles, heavy perfume, overheated nonstick pans, or strong cleaners.
Hands, dishes, and shared spaces
Treat cleanup as normal household hygiene, not as a scare. Wash hands after handling liners, droppings, bowls, perches, toys, or cleaning tools. Do not clean cages, bowls, perches, or bird equipment in the kitchen sink or on food-prep surfaces; use a separate cleanup area and keep bird supplies away from human food.
Learn the normal Bare-eyed Cockatoos baseline
Learn what normal looks like for the bird: weight, appetite, droppings, breathing, posture, feathers, voice, and energy. Birds can hide illness well, so call an avian vet quickly for not eating, tail-bobbing breathing, bleeding, a bird that cannot stay upright, egg trouble, or a sudden quiet mood.
Questions to ask before bringing one home
Ask about noise, dust, escape habits, bite history, feather condition, and how the bird behaves when people stop interacting.





