My hometown has a bit of a reputation as a wild place, but not in the “supportive of exotic wildlife” sense, if you know what I mean. Yet an abundance of avifauna thrive here, including one species of the family Psittacidae. For those of you unfamiliar with ornithological taxonomy, that is a parrot!

Monk Parakeet

Yes, parrots may be found in the Bronx. In fact, one large colony is fully entrenched in one of our public parks. These birds are Monk Parakeets (Myiopsitta monachus). Though native to subtropical and temperate South America, these hardy invasives have, thanks to the pet trade, established footholds in cities and agricultural communities across the United States. So successful is the monk parakeet that it is actually accepted as an ABA Checklist species, at least here in New York. We’ve been waiting for an opportune time to add these beauties to the Core Team life list and this tedious period when fall migration has ended and winter rarities have yet to appear is particularly propitious for such an excursion. So, we finally made our pilgrimage to visit the wild parrots of the Bronx.

This trip wasn’t as easy to accomplish as it may sound. First, we had to find the parrots. The popular parrots in NYC nest crosstown in Brooklyn, while the Bronx birds keep a low profile. Thanks to Steve of BrooklynParrots.com whose site is worth a very long visit. Steve has got the monks of the five boroughs wired, though he does refer to them as Quaker parakeets or parrots (he’s far from the only one.) He graciously sent us across the Bronx to the enormous Pelham Bay Park.

Crossing the Bronx is an adventure in itself. To make matters worse, I have an inexplicable inability to remember my way around the east Bronx which manifested itself with a vengeance that day. When we finally did find our target site, right where Steve said it would be, parking was nigh impossible. But my determination to avoid a trip to Brooklyn was great enough to overcome all obstacles. We found the park, then found the described baseball diamond, and at last beheld a thriving colony of Bronx parrots!

Parrot nest

Actually, what we first noticed were the massive clusters of sticks enshrouding each light platform. The monk parakeet is the only parrot in the world that builds its own nests and enormous ones at that, a habit that recently got this species in quite a bit of trouble in Connecticut. But once we spotted the nests, we took note of the parrots’ raucous cries. Parrots are appallingly unmusical birds, as hard on the ears as they are easy on the eyes. But once they started coming into view, their noisy shrieks were forgotten. Monk parakeets are breathtakingly green with pale gray below, rich blue primaries, and long, tapering tails. We saw at least twenty of these psittaformes, some at a fairly close range. Another benefit of the trip was the amazing playground in the parrot’s territory, one that Mason enjoyed immensely. So, each member of the Core Team was well-satisfied by our parrot pilgrimage. Best of all, we didn’t have to go to Brooklyn!

Written by Mike
Mike is a leading authority in the field of standardized test preparation, but he's also a traveler who fully expects to see every bird in the world. Besides founding 10,000 Birds in 2003, Mike has also created a number of other entertaining but now extirpated nature blog resources, particularly the Nature Blog Network and I and the Bird.