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Fundación Loros
B84's Twisted Beak Is Now Simply His Own

Friday, March 13, 2026

B84's Twisted Beak Is Now Simply His Own

By Alejandro Rigatuso, Fundador y Director de Fundación Loros


Veterinarian Alessandra lifted him carefully between gloved hands, wrapped him in cloth, and brought the file close to his beak. The parrot B84 — a perico with brilliant green plumage and flashes of yellow across his head — had arrived at the procedure carrying a deformity that had long drawn the team's attention: his beak, flaking and misshapen, twisted to one side as though the bird wore a perpetual question on his face. The intention had been to correct it through filing, but the file confirmed what had already been suspected — the malformation had calcified into bone. There was no bleeding. There was nothing more to be done. What remained after the attempt was a certainty: the twisted beak is no longer a wound, nor a condition to be corrected — it is simply B84. And B84, with that beak no one will ever straighten, eats well. He defends himself, grasps, chews. The photographs from that day document the before and after of the procedure, but above all they document a parrot who found his way of living with what he has.

About the author

Alejandro Rigatuso · Fundador y Director de Fundación Loros

Alejandro Rigatuso arrived at Fundación Loros after years as Vice President of Growth Marketing at Toptal, bringing with him an unconventional perspective: he knows an animal is well by its eyes, "bright, wide open." Lorenzo, the first parrot released, recaptured several times and always set free to fly again, marked him forever. At dusk, around five-thirty, you'll find him at the Mirador de las Ciénagas or wandering around Cerro El Peligro, envisioning observation towers and hundreds of native parrots soaring over a reserve that an entire community calls their own.

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