
Sunday, March 29, 2026
One Last Peanut Before Taking Flight
By Alejandro Rigatuso, Fundador y Director de Fundación Loros
A few weeks earlier, someone in the village had caught this amazon parrot and brought it to the Fundación. It was a large specimen — deep green plumage, a sharply defined yellow crown, red patches blazing across the wings. The kind of bird you look at and sense has already lived a great deal. Its identification band was gone, but the team needed no other signs: this parrot had been free for a long time, and it showed.
On Sunday, March 29th, Omar lifted him out of Aviario 1A and set him on the outdoor feeding perch. The parrot didn't flinch. He simply stayed there, unhurried, eating a peanut with the quiet composure of someone who knows exactly what comes next. When he finished, he opened his wings and flew off on his own — no coaxing, no ceremony.
And so ended this amazon's time at Fundación Loros — possibly Amazona ochrocephala — without fanfare or fuss. Just a bird who had always known what freedom felt like, taking a moment to eat something before returning to it.
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.




