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Fundación Loros

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Number 2 and His Twelve Companions

By Alejandro Rigatuso, Fundador y Director de Fundación Loros


For years, macaw number 2 carried a verdict that seemed impossible to appeal: he was too tame to live in the wild. He had grown up so close to humans, so accustomed to their presence, that many doubted he could ever find his place among the trees. But animals, sometimes, take it upon themselves to prove us wrong. On March 21st, Alejandro Rigatuso found him in the sector of the Ara aviaries, near Cerro El Peligro, and what he saw left no room for doubt: number 2 was flying fully integrated into a flock of about twelve macaws, as if it had always been that way. They have been free for months now. He is no longer the tame macaw of the aviaries — he is one among twelve, part of a flock that moves and makes decisions together. Sometimes tameness is not a sentence, but simply a starting point.

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.