 Does he have any other bird friends that he likes? Good job. Fliders, sniffers, and hatchlings. My name is Marlene McCohen. Welcome to my channel. This is my brother, Danny. And this is our bird tie. And today, this video is going to be all about tie and answering your questions about tie, including talking about his plucking, which is a pretty good subject to get on. But before we go on, I want to give some shout outs to my Fliders Club. Annie Bates, Stacey Bacon, and Diane Brunick. Thank you guys so much for being a part of my Fliders Club. Okay, obviously I had to have my brother in this video because tie, although he started off as the family bird, this is now tie's daddy. What is the story of tie? You want to tell them the story of like the day that we got tie? Before you even tell that, the first thing I remember the night before is crowding around dad going like, we cannot live without a bird right now. One day we all ganged up on my dad, me, Jenna, and Marlene. And we all kind of told him like, hey, you know, we had the experience of living with a bird. We miss it. We need another one. Is there anyway? We would prefer a bird exactly like the one we had. But at this point, we were desperate. We would, you know, we'll take anything, you know? Because we had Duffy. You guys know the story of Duffy. The reason we couldn't bring Duffy with us was because to leave the country, then the bird would have had to be in quarantine. And my dad did not want that because it was like a six month quarantine and you don't know where the birds are or what they do. So he thought it would be better for the bird psyche. And since, because that's like uncharted territory, we didn't know if he just went to another bird lover because we knew we weren't moving back. And he lived, the guy lived in a penthouse overlooking the beach. I had a little African gray sitting with him and very content, very happy, very beautiful upscale home. Couldn't have passed him on to somebody better. Do you remember like the last day you saw Duffy? Because I thought of that today, like I wasn't living there anymore. So I didn't know because I would imagine like the last day saying goodbye would be like. Yeah, I think I was also either away or something. And then I don't think I got to say goodbye. So I'd come back and every time I would go back and visit, I would go see him. I would call the guy, but I think can I come see the bird? The next day, it felt like the next thing. I feel like the next day that like after we ganged up on dad, after we ganged up on dad, it was pretty much the next day. And I think we ganged up at a hotel in San Antonio or something like that. And I remember one of the events was at a hotel. We realized that we were really close to getting a yes. So when we got back home, I think the same week or maybe within the same month, we ganged up on him again, me, Jenna and Marlene. And we told him everything. He says, okay, I'll look for a bird. And I think the next day was a Sunday because us annoying our dad about the bird, getting another bird was late, late night, I remember. Yeah, it was late night. It was very late. And then Sunday morning, wakes us up, I remember and says, Hey, I found a bird and he lives on a farm. Yeah, but remember being you were on a photo shoot? We're like modeling on a photo shoot. You remember that part like on the railroad tracks? Yeah, I don't think I was modeling. I think you were not. I think I just drove. You drove. You were supposed to be there's pictures. I have picture evidence. I will find it anyway. So we all hopped in the car. We got there. We saw Ty and Ty wasn't as kind as he is right now. So Ty, you could maybe pet him for three seconds, four seconds. And then he'd kind of tell you like, Hey, get off me. You know, don't touch me anymore. He'd kind of go towards you while we were there. The lady told me and everybody that, Hey, we can't hold Ty because Ty will bite. And if he bites, it hurts really bad. She says, if you do buy the bird, as soon as you leave this property, you can hold him. You can do whatever you want with him. But, you know, she's like, he needs a lot of work. And at the time, you know, we didn't know much. So she just held him and we all just sat in awe, watching her hold the bird. And she could even tell that she was like, Oh, he's coming to me and she was scared. Yeah, she was scared. She was holding him on her forearm right here. You remember that time. And she had pretty much explained to us the backstory of Ty. Ty was, I think, nine at the time or seven at the time when we got him. They bought him for a 12 year old girl. Ty fell in love with this girl. They were best friends. Ty, she could essentially do anything she wanted to Ty. And we never got to meet this girl. And essentially she grew up, 18, 19. She met a young fella. They got together, got married, and Ty was very jealous. So he would try and attack the gentlemen all the time. They couldn't deal with it anymore. So when she moved out and moved in with him, she left Ty with the parents. The parents lived on a farm with horses and chickens. So Ty still till today will do chicken noises, horse noises every now and then. We'll do that sometimes. He does bark like a dog. By the way, funny story. When we walked in, all their furniture was chewed up and my mom was like, How did the bird do this? Cause she was like, oh my God. And you guys know that we weren't new to lesser sulfur crested cockatoos. Duffy was a lesser sulfur crested. My mom knew that like Duffy had pulled out. You guys remember the story of the entire socket and everything. But I think one of the like cutest things was to remember when we left, Ty was in the car and just, it was like, bye-bye, bye-bye. He was like, peace out. I'm leaving you guys. That just goes to show to like, you know, there's life changes. Like that girl like loved the bird, but like what happened? You got like a husband. Like, I mean, Danny and I, like what would you have done if CEO didn't like birds? She didn't, she didn't like dogs. And then what? I really want to go close to Ty too much, but CEO came into the story much later. There's a lot before CEO came into the thing. Like, first of all, once they agreed on the price and I was like, oh, this bird actually might be mine. And the lady was holding him and she told us that none of us could hold him. I just walked right up to Ty. I put my forearm next to hers and Ty just stepped up and she was in shock. She was like, oh my God, he went to you and I'm like, she's like, be careful. You know, he might bite you and I just kind of took her. I was like, let me get away from this lady because she might be making the bird tense. So I went over and I took him to my side. I put him in the car and he just sat with me and then they loaded everything up and we essentially got home and Ty, you could not pet him for more than five seconds. He would not let you touch him. He would not let you. He would kind of move away or take his beak and move your finger away and he had plucked all around here. I think within three months of us having him, it all grew back. But every year, let's say we adopted him in March. Every year around March, he would pluck here again. Oh my God. Yeah, and that went on for five years. He would, every year, he would pluck here once and then it would grow back and then he would pluck next year and grow back and then it just stopped after about five, six years. He completely stopped doing it until probably two, three months ago. Sio got sick for two days. Those two nights that Sio was sick, both nights he plucked his feathers. So Ty, we couldn't really touch him versus today where you can kiss him and cuddle. What we did was we would give him his favorite treats, let him eat it. While he was eating it, we would pet him. He would enjoy his treats so much that he wouldn't focus so much on that somebody's touching him and then he'd pet him, he'd pet him, he'd pet him. And once he was done with his food, he'd kind of come back to normal and then see that you're petting him and then he'd be like, hey, get away. And then he'd tell you again to shoo away. We did this over and over and over and over and over and over again. I would probably say I've been bit, probably 30 to 50 times from Ty. I mean like bad bites. Every year that went by, I would get a bit less and less and less. So I would say in the first year, I probably got bit like nine times once a month. I remember it was once a month for like a good two and a half years. I would get a good bite. What made you, like a lot of people give up on cockatoos to them very unpredictable? And so what made you like not be afraid to keep going with the bird? So the bird has emotions too and I would have to say that when I would first get that bite, it would hurt, it would bleed, it would hurt for a couple of days. But as soon as Ty would bite me, he would run back to his cage and he would stay in there for two to three days and wouldn't come out. So I realized that he felt bad that he made a mistake. I wasn't so much pain. I didn't want to go close to him. But then I realized that he would not come out of the cage unless we worked it out. You know, if I came back to the cage and said Ty, you know, come to me, come out. He wouldn't come out of the cage for me. I would have to kind of hover around the cage, let him climb out himself. A lot of times I would use his treats, put him on top of the cage so he would come out. When he would come out, he'd start the whole process all over again. And I realized that most of the times that I got bit, it was him telling me, hey, you wanted to go this way and I went a different way and he bit me. He didn't want to come down from a certain area that he was sitting. He didn't want to stop doing what he was doing. So then I realized, okay, this bird has a mind of his own and there's going to be times where he's going to tell me, hey, I don't want to go that way. I don't want to do that. And his way of telling you is like biting. I said, so I got to be more careful and see if he wants to flow with me on where I'm going and I need to teach him at the same time that he can't bite. You can see how you can hold tie, no fear of being bit. It was definitely worth all the bites. So do you think you would say that like those 50 bites were all a learning curve of you understanding his behavior and what bothers him and then once you figured that out because you took the time to analyze it, you didn't get bit anymore. Yeah, didn't really get bit that much anymore. We do get bit every now and then when we go away. Luckily enough, last time I went away for three weeks, I didn't get bit. But when I moved here, I pulled out the suitcase and Ty would not stop trying to attack me. He kept flying to me. He put holes in my shirt. He kept trying to bite me. I mean, he would not stop and he didn't know he was coming in. I mean, he was just trying to kill me. Sio had to hold him down and he was like, no, you're not leaving. You're not going anywhere. Lately, after he did that plucking and Sio got sick, we're finally at the stage where it's growing back. It's probably about 30% back. It did get a little worse when he came here. When he came here, he moved here. He had a little bit of a transition and he bit a little bit more on the sides, but now he's got some feathers coming back in, some big, beautiful feathers. Yeah. When I met Sio Mara and maybe they looked alike as that girl that first owned him, I don't know. But Ty took to Sio right away, but Sio didn't really want him around. She was like, I'm scared. I'm this, I'm that. Don't put him on me. Don't put him next to me. I'm scared only if you're close. And then what she fell in love with was when she was sleeping, Ty would come and walk on her back, up and down her back, up and down her arm, and then he would just fall asleep on her shoulder. She liked it. She would wake up and say, oh, I'm going to... That was so nice. He was walking up and down my back. It felt like I had good company and that's how it slowly, slowly started. I think probably a week... It took her about three weeks to a month from the day that she met Ty for them to become really good friends. Within, I think, 10 days started holding him on her hand, not really letting him go on her shoulder because she was a little bit scared. And then the first time that he went on her shoulder, it was something amazing. This is a sad story, but it was pretty cool. He bit her, but he didn't bite her like he bites me where it's a snap and then he hangs on as hard as he can and he squeezes really, really hard and then he lets go. He put both his top beak and his bottom beak on her cheek and started just squeezing. A little bit harder, a little bit harder, a little bit harder and he left it on there for a while. And I was about 20 feet away from her when I saw it happening, but I was like, oh my God, he's not really biting her. He's like kind of like almost pinching her skin. And I think that was the bite where he told her like, hey, you left. Where did you go? So this is for leaving. He drew a little bit of blood on her. She was crying and I got, I grabbed the bird and then she's crying. She's like, oh my God, he bit me. And then she was like, yeah, but it was really weird, you know, after she calmed down, she said he didn't really bite me. He kind of just put his thing right there and then just pushed harder, harder, harder, harder. And I saw it and I was like really thought to myself like he's not, he's biting her, but he's not doing the whole, you know, like the bites that I've gotten have been 10 out of 10s. What she got was like a little, I guess slap on the wrist, I would call it. But how did she, like what? I mean, you know, someone that's never had birds and then the bird like bites your face and then like, she's like, you know what? That wasn't so bad. Like, like, let's be flit. Like that's a, for someone that's not even, wasn't even into animals. That's like a level of understanding that you must have communicated to her. Yeah, cause they had a really good time before that first bite came in also, you know, sleeping and she's holding him and she's like, oh my God and this and that. And since then it's been probably 11 years and he has never, ever bit her, never tried to bite her. She can do, she can flip the bird upside down. She can tell him to fly to him. She can cuddle with him, hug him, hide him under her shirt, hide him under the pillows, under the blankets. And this bird just loves being with her. Will never bite her. If I sometimes try and take him away from her, he probably will not go. When he's with her, I'm not allowed to be around. I can't sit next to them. If they're laying on the bed, I can't lay on the bed. He gets very jealous. Kind of forgets that he's my bird, essentially was my bird. I say Ty is C.O.M.A.R.O.'s boyfriend, literally. They love each other a lot. Ty is eager to be with her every minute he can. He loves looking at her. And then he just loves to see her and look at her and be with her. That's how cockatoos are. People don't understand that you got to put in the work to like understand and like forgive and get over and move on and take everybody does like, what did I learn from that behavior? A lot of people are afraid of cockatoos because they consider them unpredictable. But like after a while, you can almost tell almost anything that they're going to do like in what you did to annoy them, you know? Yeah. And since he's been plucking just so you know, when I come home, when I wake up a little bit early with him, usually when I can, and I spend time with him before I go to work, then I feed him, I put him outside. And as soon as I come home from work, I know the first thing I do is I grab him and he's with me until the minute he goes to bed. Just so if it's caused, if his plucking was caused by any type of neglect, I'm kind of showing him that he's the most important thing until maybe it'll build back some of his confidence and making sure he's eating right. So make sure you get the bird seed because Ty would never eat bird seed until he got Marlene McCohen's signature blend. Oh yeah. He gets obsessed with the bag. He's obsessed with the bag. He'll jump on the bag. When we order it from the website, when it comes in, Ty knows it's for him. He's automatically latching onto the bag. Doesn't want to let anybody open it. Sticking his head in, walking into the bag. He knows it's for him. He loves rice. So we would always have to have something for him. What time is it, Ty Ty? Yeah, 10 o'clock every night. He says time for bed. What time is it, Ty? It's the day we got him. 10 o'clock. People asked about that. A lot of the things that they asked about, we've covered. But if you want to ask the straight out question, I'm going to ask you some questions. Liv Larson, how long have you had him? I think 16 years or something like that? 17 years. Very scary owning a bird for 17 years because if he's not with you, it's like something's missing. I know. So if he's not in the room with me, not in the home with me, that's not where the house feels empty. We've been together for a very long time. Yeah, that's how it should be. Optimus Crystal, what's his favorite song or genre of music? The only thing I could say is he loves pure talent. So he was a big fan of like old school, like Elvis. Madonna, Michael Jackson. He is very in tune with I guess the greats. I've had a preference of electronic music. So he grew to love that. Latin music. He grew to love that. He really loves Latin music. He really loves that music. But I've never seen him sing as much as he sings during an Elvis song. Michael Jackson. And I think that that genre from Elvis' ears because it's slower music, it's more what's it called. He can actually kind of catch on to the beat and the lyrics and kind of sing with it. Megs5555 says can Ty fly? Ty can fly. If I am on the bed and Ty can see me, Ty will fly to the bed to be with me. If he gets scared, he will fly. Most occasions, he will climb down from wherever he is and he will walk wherever he needs to go. Very strange. When I first got him, we got over the hump of him biting me all the time and we were able to pet him and we really bonded. I could tell Ty to fly to me and he would fly to me. How did you all come up with the name Ty? Moose and Olive. Yeah, I should ask you the same thing about your name. Moose and Olive. Why don't you get your name? So Ty, when we got him, his name was Ty, but it was T-Y-E and the plan was to change his name. But then we realized when he says, Ty, Ty, time for bed. Ty's a pretty little birdie. We can't really change his name. And he was, he wasn't like, he was a puppy, you know, nine months old or something like that. He was like, seven, you know, so we couldn't just name him Rick or something, you know? Like you call him Rick, he'd be like, you, me? I'm Ty. So the only thing we did was we changed the spelling, T-H-A-I. So we can't change the name, but we can change the spelling to make him more towards us. You know, our bird, like maybe naming a pet or a loved one is something to do with, you know, bonding. And I wanted to bond with him in a way to say he's mine, but I didn't want to disrupt all of his greatness, you know that he had. He can say, time for bed, Ty's a pretty little birdie. Ty's a little baby. Ty's a little baby birdie. Yeah. Mikey's a bad, bad dog. Mikey, come here. Lucky, because of our dog Lucky that he used to have. Danny. Yeah. Says Danny. Time for bed, Danny. I swear he says something about going to the bathroom. Yeah, like I go to the bathroom. Yeah. The other day he said, oh, I know the alphabet. And I was like, oh, he says yabba-dabba-doo. Yeah. He says a lot of yabba-dabba-doo. Yabba-dabba-doo. Bye-bye. Bye-bye. He knows how to say, bye-bye. Did he say hello? Oh, and if he sees pretty women, he'll go, Oh yeah. Yeah. He talks a lot for a cockatoo actually. Yeah. What are you chewing? So a lot of people are asking is Ty a rescue? Well, he's definitely a re-home, like, time for bed. How did he learn to go to bed? He came like that. Ty, when we first got him, all of a sudden at 10 o'clock at night, just kind of looked at us and was like, time for bed. Time for bed. And we were like, we need to go to bed or you need to go to bed. And he's like, time for bed, Ty. Time for bed, Ty. And we're like, oh, I mean, Ty needs to go to bed. So we tried to cover him. I think his cage was like in the kitchen and we tried to cover him and when we put him in the cage and we covered him and we, you know, we all sat around. We're still talking. And Ty was like, time for bed, time for bed, time for bed now. And we realized he wouldn't stop screaming. We couldn't understand what it was. So we took him and we put him in a bedroom. We put his cage, we covered him, we turned off the light and shut the door. And once we shut the door, that was it. He just went straight to bed, didn't say anything, didn't say time for bed, didn't scream, nothing. I mean, nothing. And then we realized, okay, Ty will only go to bed in a dark room where there's no noise. When he goes to bed, you can't be in there and turn on a light. You can't even turn on the hallway light outside the bedroom. You can't even walk in our yelze. He was like, time for bed. Has Ty ever had any incidents where he had to go to the vet? No incidents where he's had to go to the vet. He's been pretty healthy, well maintained. Mrs. Howard is very concerned with whose bird Ty is. I thought Ty was your brother's bird. But you said in a video, he's yours. Who is he? The mystery. If Ty is your bird, then why did he live with your brother? Will you give Ty to your brother? Ty is the family bird, but he's their bird now because Ty has spent the last 15 years with Danny. So Ty is Danny and see those bird. But with us, like all our animals are our animals, you know? Yeah. When we first got Ty, we all, me, Marlene and Jenna all lived under the same roof. So we would literally argue over whose turn it is to play with Ty. Then Marlene moved away first. I moved away second. And then as much as I wanted to take Ty to the house that I moved in, my dad would not let me. He was like, no, this bird needs to be around three or four people all the time. Always socializing. You can't take him to your house and then leave for eight hours and come back. This bird needs to be with somebody all the time. My dad was like, I need to make him breakfast. I need him to be there when I'm with him. I like sitting at him. I like watching him. I like seeing him. Oh, I got a question from XXLoka. How did Ty get TikTok famous? Well, we took him to Austin. And we filmed the whole trip to Austin. We filmed him getting walking and telling him that we're leaving and we just opened the front door and he climbed down from the chair he was on. We caught him on video. He walked all the way outside. He climbed into the car by himself. Mikey was already there in the car. We left the house. We just started filming. I was like, hey, you know what would be cool? Let's go into Walmart and take Ty with us. We took Ty in there. Ty chose a bunch of essential items we needed. Scanned him out. And then I think we kind of made videos on the way to Austin. A few months later, I think a month later, after not really paying attention to it, we came back and there was almost like 160. No, there was like 160, 170,000 views on the video and Ty had good 10,000 fans. So then we said, hey, Ty's got something going for him. So ever since then, we've just been posting videos and I think today we're close to 20,000 followers. Yay. We put up some good bird content at Ty's Crazy Land. Ty's Crazy Land, T-H-A-I-Z Crazy Land, all one. We do a lot of challenges. You get to see behind the scenes of what it's like living with. I'll be cockatoo. Jane Oo says, how loud is Ty? Ty is very loud. He's the loudest bird. Ty is the loudness of when you get in your car and you forgot that when you got out last time, your speakers were blasting. So when you get in and you turn on your car and your speakers are at full volume and you get that like, uh, uh, uh, that's how loud Ty is. Does he have any other bird friends that he likes? Good job. Finchy just left. Did you even notice Finchy was in here the whole time? No, just when he started flying. We have some people from Marlene's group. I'd like to shout out to Trevor and Lucy. Oh, Trevor. I love Lucy. Yeah. Um, Trevor, we met him at a meet and greet. We fell in love with his bird, Lucy, and we kind of tried to steal it. I'm just kidding. A few times we've tried to steal Lucy. We have another family that we all babysit for each other. You're like the babysitter's club. So we watch a lot of birds and when we go away, we have great people that watch our birds. That happened from our meet and greet. Yeah. So sometimes if you do if Marlene hosts a meet and greet in your area and you don't want to board your birds somewhere when you go away or when you travel, it's good to come to those events, socialize with the people, find out where they live. These are usually bird experts. And the trick is you offer to watch their bird first. Like, hey, if you ever go away, I'll watch your bird. And then they're obligated. They're obligated. Right? They say, oh, well, if you go away, you know, we'll watch your bird. That's when you hit them with the dates and the time and ask which bird to drop them off. Just like that. We should do a video on that. How to get people to watch your birds because people ask me, like, what do you do with your birds? And it's like, we always have really good people. Can I just give a shout out to Candy? Yeah. Because she's watched Ty many times. We love the Candy. We should do another get together. It's always tons of fun. And she's got a beautiful array of exotic birds. It's so much fun going to her house. All her birds are super friendly. And they're super engaged, not cave. What else do you want to say about Ty? Anything else you want to say? Very smart bird. Always watching. It's like having a surveillance camera in your house. What's Ty's personality like? Ty is a boy. I didn't know if he was a boy when I got him. I had him DNA tested. Find out that he's a boy. We originally thought it was a girl and he's had nick names throughout his whole period with it. We used to call him Gucci Moodoo. Yeah, Gucci Moodoo. Yeah, Gucci Moodoo. Then it went to like Moodoo. It went to Chucharito. Chucharito? Yeah, I used to call him Chucharito for a while. One of his first nick's name was Fatso because I was in shock how much this bird could eat. I was like, oh my God, this bird can eat so much. I came to the conclusion that if you took everything that a bird ate in a day and put it on the side, it'd probably be a mass bigger than the bird himself. Oh, yeah. So I called him Fatso. This bird is so fat. But when Cio Mara came into my life, I realized that Ty cannot say Cio Mara. He can't. He can't say S. He can't say Cio. So I knew he knew how to say Fatso or was learning how to say Fatso. So I changed Cio's name to Fatso. Yeah. So now Cio's like, why are you calling me Fatso? You know, I don't have an inch of an ounce of fat on me. I would say because Ty can't say your name. So we're going to have to nickname you something that he's used to. So one day when Cio was in the shower, I was down in the bed and I would just call and I was like Fatso, Fatso and she would say what? And I wait and then I go Fatso and she go what? And then she came out of the shower screaming why do you keep calling me? I keep responding you're not saying anything. And then Ty just looks in and goes Fatso. And I'm like, I think you learn how to say your name now. So we actually changed Cio's name to Fatso. And over time now we call Ty Chuch for short and he responds to his nicknames. Oh, you're so cute. But anything else you want to say about Ty? He smells really good. Oh yeah. He showers with me. He eats with me. Loves a lot of Cio Mara's healthy cooking. He loves to be a part of things. He loves to always be watching. He loves dad. Cockatoo is much more content if he's watching things that are happening. A cockatoo will be better behaved if you're working in a room and you take him and put him in an area where he can see what you're doing. My experience has been once I take the cockatoo and put him in a different room because I want quiet where I am in this room. He's over there wondering, Hey, what are you doing? Hey, whoa, wow, because you can't tell what's going on. So you're like, Oh, I don't want a burden here because he's not going to be quiet. Actually, if you go and you put him somewhere else, they kind of feel neglected. Cockatoo's are very emotional and then you're like, How come you're not taking me? How come I'm not with you? How come I'm not this? How come I'm not that? So you're better off just taking him and putting him somewhere where he can be by himself not really climb down or climb up. Usually they're very content. So if the gardener is trimming some trees in the backyard and you have a cage out there or something like that or somebody's cleaning the pool, Ty would love to just go watch when they were building up something in my backyard, Ty was out there for the three weeks they were building and he just love watching people work doing stuff. They like to be entertained, you know? Yeah, they're like human behavior analysts. Yes. Yeah. And he was very smart and you guys take him everywhere. I mean, you guys take him like everywhere. They take him everywhere. Like follow the TikTok. They take him everywhere. I don't even know like this bird goes like to the beach. They take him to the parks. They travel with him. Oh, he goes on a walk every day with, with Mikey probably twice a day. I took him for a walk with Sandy today. When Mikey goes to the park, Ty comes to the park. We don't take him to restaurants. We took him to Austin and he went bar hopping with us and all of a sudden there's a rumor floating around Sixth Street over there that there's a white bird on the streets and roaming around you have to get a picture with him. You have to this and then people would come up to us when they would see Ty and we're like, oh my God, I heard there was a bird on Sixth Street but I thought the person was lying to me. I thought it was a rumor. I thought it was a hoax. I can't believe it. And we had people gather around. We got free food from bars. Bar owners were giving Ty nuts asking us to come sit in the bar and just put him down and eat some nuts. We got free pizza. People were just entertained and a lot of live music in Austin and Ty would dance when he would hear the live music so he would be the most entertaining thing in the building because people would be like, oh, look, there's a bird here and he's dancing. Oh, he's dancing. And you can follow that on my TikTok as well. You can go check it out. We have the whole trip to Austin. We have San Diego. We have Santa Barbara. We have trips to the park. We have trips to pretty much everywhere we frequent. We want to show people like, hey, these are really great animals. They can be great pals and you can pretty much take them anywhere. Why do you love birds so much? I was originally a dog person. I still am very in love with dogs but I've learned to realize that these birds are something amazing. They're very smart and there's advantages to having birds and there's advantages to having dogs. But a bird needs you, needs your attention and needs your support and needs your love and it's almost like owning a baby toddler for the rest of your life. A lot of thought goes into it. That's why you see a lot of birds up for adoption. If you are going to take on a bird, hopefully that person you adopt and from appreciates what you're doing and hopefully you know what you're getting into. That's about it. I'm lucky mine worked out really well. That is it. If you guys have any more questions for Danny, Ty, me, anything about Ty, I hope that gives you a new intro. Bye-bye! Oh my God! How do you know? If you know, see they're just so smart guys. Say bye, Ty, to all of your fans. Say bye-bye. Say bye-bye. You mean it. I hope you enjoyed this video. We are signing off. Ty is saying bye-bye to you guys. Enjoy this Pick Me Marlene submission. Don't forget to subscribe and hit that notification bell if you guys haven't been getting my videos. That's why hit the notification bell. I love you guys so much. Bye-bye! Bye-bye. And if you guys are looking for an amazing bird food brand for your bird that is healthy, organic and not full of food colorings and sugar and peanut smash, check out Marlene's signature blend. I did this along with Top's Parrot Food. I encourage you guys to check out my Feathered Fun Box. It's a passion project. It's a subscription box that comes with parrot toys for your bird and also special merch. Kind of like my dream box. Honestly, I put so much into it. I love that there's something like this for birds out in the world. That's why I created it. www.featheredfunbox.com I love you guys so, so much. Thank you for listening.