SE Minnesota Avian Rescue

SE Minnesota Avian Rescue

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A safe place for you to surrender your parrots large or small in southeastern Minnesota, Iowa area.

06/05/2026

Weather is gorgeous out the big birds got outside!!
* none of these birds are available for adoption *

WE ARE OPEN FOR INTAKES IF NEEDED

Photos from SE Minnesota Avian Rescue's post 05/31/2026

It’s National Parrot Day!! We wanted to introduce you all to our ambassadors.

Remember we are available if your unable to care for your parrot shoot us a msg

05/16/2026

Thanks for the great time!!! Maverick and us will be back again! We may bring a different friend next time.

Cool Customer of the Day is Maverick the Macaw! 💙

Maverick’s parents are a part of the SE Minnesota Avian Rescue. They take in, rehome and rehab birds & parrots such as Maverick. Maverick has been part of their flock for 3 years now and loves getting to socialize. Thanks for bringing Maverick into Pet Expo! 😍

05/13/2026

❤️❤️❤️

Running a rescue — whether it’s a large public facility, a small private home rescue, or anything in between — is still running a legitimate organization with real financial responsibilities behind it.

Every rescue operates a little differently. Some are privately funded. Some rely completely on donations. Some depend heavily on adoption fees. Others do fundraisers constantly just to stay afloat. But at the end of the day, the goal is the same: caring for the birds and making sure the next one in need has somewhere safe to land.

For those following along, yes… there absolutely are fake “rescues” out there pretending to do the right thing. That’s not what this post is about. I’m talking about the rescues that are legitimate organizations — the ones properly registered, properly operating, filing taxes, doing paperwork, carrying overhead, and doing the work day in and day out. The ones you can look up on the IRS website and verify.

Birds are not free.
Nothing about their care is free.

Food isn’t free.
Toys and enrichment aren’t free.
Rust-free cages aren’t free.
Disease testing isn’t free.
Vet exams aren’t free.
Perches aren’t free.
Cleaning supplies aren’t free.
Emergency medical care definitely isn’t free.

And the hard reality is that rescue work can become financially overwhelming very quickly because there is always another bird that needs help.

Many rescues — myself included at different points over the years — have experienced moments of wondering how everything was going to get paid. How to afford the next vet bill. How to keep up with food costs. How to continue saying yes when another bird needed saved.

Thankfully, over time, I’ve learned my limits better and what I can realistically sustain responsibly. But it’s still hard. Rescue is emotionally exhausting and financially exhausting all at once.

When you pay an adoption fee, you are not “buying” a bird.

You are helping feed the flock already in care.
You are helping provide enrichment and safe housing.
You are helping cover medical costs.
You are helping the next neglected, abused, abandoned, or unwanted bird that hasn’t even arrived yet.

You are also helping support the sanctuary birds — the ones who may never leave rescue because they simply do not thrive in private homes. The overlooked birds. The ex-breeders. The traumatized birds. The birds nobody fully understood before they landed safely in rescue care.

This is why adoption fees matter.
And this is why rescues deserve the same respect as any other legitimate business or organization.

For many years I tried to work with people by allowing payment arrangements and delayed balances because I understood life happens. Unfortunately, over time, too many people abused the kindness of rescues, so last year I made the decision to change that policy. Everything is now paid upfront at the time of adoption, no exceptions.

Not because I’m mean.
Not because I don’t care.
But because the birds depend on stability.

Please don’t put rescues on the back burner financially. We deserve the same respect people give their car payments, utility bills, or other financial obligations — because real lives are depending on us to keep those doors open.

And trust me… every rescue owner I know would much rather spend their time loving birds than worrying about bills.

05/10/2026

Happy Mother’s Day! 💐
Wishing you a day filled with love, laughter, and lots of happy moments with your flock, family, and friends. 🌷🦜

Photos from SE Minnesota Avian Rescue's post 05/09/2026

Meet Our newest intake Max. Age unknown cockatiel owner passed away and a nice neighbor took him in and did her best by him and took great care of him while she had him. Now it’s our turn to care for him and love on him and get him ready for his next adventure

05/08/2026

Thank each and every one of you for following us!! We are currently open for intakes if you or you know someone that needs help please message us

04/27/2026

We appreciate each and every one of you that stopped by at our tables at the cottage grove bird show! We will be back in August!! Good News! All of the available adoptable birds found loving new homes!! Thank you again so much for coming out and supporting us!!!!

Photos from SE Minnesota Avian Rescue's post 04/19/2026

FOUND A GREAT NEW HOME!!

Meet Dooby. He is a 15-20 year old hahns macaw (mini macaw). He’s very much a man’s man so he needs a male care taker. He can say a lot of things and is a good loveable boy. He is now looking for his new home. Bird experience is a must with this little guy. We will be at the cottage grove mn bird show and the onalaska wi show. Please pm me for more info or any questions. Rehoming fee does apply.

04/05/2026
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Rochester, MN
55901