The Macaw That Had Outgrown the Aviary
Not every bird finds its way to freedom by the same path. This *Ara severus* — a chestnut-fronted macaw of difficult temperament — left aviary 1 at Fundación Loros not as a quiet triumph of rehabilitation, but as an urgent decision: the bird had developed a sustained aggression the team could no longer ignore, and there was well-founded suspicion that it had killed one of its enclosure companions.
It was Omar and Alberto who carried out the release, on a Sunday in March, in a rural setting surrounded by trees and the packed earth of a country yard. In the photograph that came in from the field, the macaw appears perched on a metal structure — green and still for one brief moment — while in the background a few hens go about their business as though nothing of consequence is happening. There was no ceremony. Only the instant when the bird spread its wings and proved, with a strong and steady flight, that its body at least was ready for what lay ahead.
Sometimes rehabilitation ends this way: without applause, with a loss on the inside and a departure on the outside. The macaw left because it was necessary. And because, by then, it flew well.