WingDow.com

Title

Wingdow - The window seat for birds to land and perch - Home Page

Contact

Administrative:

s Summit MO
United States 64064
(816) 524-4668


Registrant:

Wingdow, LLC
Chicgo IL
United States 60659

Description

We are a company formed with one mission: We make birds happy. We are focused on birds that live inside our houses at the moment, but our vision is wider. If our products find the level of acceptance we foresee, we will donate funds to pet bird orphanages and to avian hospitals. The principal humans in this company are focused on these issues and intend to join others in supporting them. The avian members on our roll call insist we do so.

We have a Senegal named Pook and a Blue Headed Pionus named Sapphire. Pook really likes his sunshine and also likes to chew our windows. I spent a long Saturday morning making the first Wingdow™ Seat from sheet plastic and generic hardware and it was an instant hit. I swear Pook thanked me for it. He saw its purpose instantly and flew to it, and he is by no means an early adopter. Then Sapphie was interested enough to chase Pook away, so I went back to Home Depot that afternoon for the stuff to make the second one. That worked for our office, but Sunday I made two more for their room. The first examples were made of acrylic sheets joined by ugly metal corner brackets with pop rivets that soon cracked the plastic. They were tedious to make so they stayed up, cracks and all, for two years. Lucero, the new canary, is the bird who is responsible for bringing the Wingdow™ Seat to market. Our birds fly freely through the house at regular times and we wanted the canary to do so as well. The first time we let Lucero out in our office, he flew to the Wingdow™ Seat nearest his house as his first landing spot. His next stop was the Wingdow™ Seat on the other side of the room hidden by a large plant display. He must have been planning his flight from his house by watching Pook and Sapphie.

I have owned pet birds off and on since my childhood and always noticed their natural attraction for windows. I don’t think they are just trying to escape. I believe they are genuinely far more open to adventure than humans are, and I envy them. Perhaps this envy is felt by other bird fanciers.

Additional Information



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